Feature Channels: Women's Health

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Newswise: Maria Shriver and The Women’s Alzheimer’s Movement Join Cleveland Clinic
Released: 3-Feb-2022 7:00 AM EST
Maria Shriver and The Women’s Alzheimer’s Movement Join Cleveland Clinic
Cleveland Clinic

Cleveland Clinic and Maria Shriver, founder of The Women’s Alzheimer’s Movement (WAM), announced a ground-breaking partnership today aimed at further addressing and reducing women’s risk for Alzheimer’s disease: The Women’s Alzheimer’s Movement at Cleveland Clinic (WAM at Cleveland Clinic).

Newswise: Yale Cancer Center Study Explores New Path to Treat Advanced Triple-Negative Breast Cancer
Released: 2-Feb-2022 2:00 PM EST
Yale Cancer Center Study Explores New Path to Treat Advanced Triple-Negative Breast Cancer
Yale Cancer Center/Smilow Cancer Hospital

A new study by researchers at Yale Cancer Center shows inhibition of the CECR2 gene prevents triple-negative breast cancer from advancing or metastasizing. The discovery is an early step in finding new therapeutics for triple-negative breast cancer (TNBC), one of the most difficult disease sub-types to treat.

Newswise: Social Isolation and Loneliness Increase Heart Disease Risk in Senior Women
31-Jan-2022 5:05 PM EST
Social Isolation and Loneliness Increase Heart Disease Risk in Senior Women
University of California San Diego

Data from a UC San Diego Herbert Wertheim School of Public Health and Human Longevity Science study point to as much as a 27% increase in heart disease risk in postmenopausal women who experience both high levels of social isolation and loneliness.

Released: 2-Feb-2022 10:05 AM EST
Blood Test Could Help Predict a Deadly Pregnancy Complication
Michigan State University

A blood test could help doctors predict which pregnant women are likely to develop a life-threatening condition called pre-eclampsia, a study co-authored by a Michigan State University researcher found.

Newswise: Novel biomarkers help decode metastatic breast cancer
Released: 2-Feb-2022 8:05 AM EST
Novel biomarkers help decode metastatic breast cancer
University of South Australia

New research from the University of South Australia has found a connection between aggressive breast cancer cells and the dual CXCR4-CCR7 cell surface protein complexes. The research shows a direct relation between the number of these associations and the severity of the disease.

Released: 1-Feb-2022 12:20 PM EST
3 things to know about women’s heart health
Mayo Clinic

February is American Heart Month ― a time to call attention to heart health issues such as heart disease and stroke. Cardiovascular disease is the No. 1 killer of women, causing 1 in 3 deaths each year, according to the American Heart Association. While progress has been made to reduce cardiovascular disease for every age and gender over the past two decades, but the progress has been slower in improving risk factors and death rates in women under 50.

Released: 1-Feb-2022 11:40 AM EST
An Empty Stomach Is Delayed During Childbirth, But Less So in Women Having Epidural Analgesia
American Society of Anesthesiologists (ASA)

A study published Online First in Anesthesiology, the official peer-reviewed journal of the American Society of Anesthesiologists (ASA), finds “stomach emptying” is substantially slower during labor – but somewhat faster in women who receive an epidural for pain control.

Released: 1-Feb-2022 10:25 AM EST
Media Advisory: Mount Sinai Celebrates “Go Red for Women” During American Heart Month
Mount Sinai Health System

Cardiologists emphasize importance of exercise, nutrition, mental health to prevent heart disease during COVID-19 pandemic

Released: 28-Jan-2022 2:05 PM EST
Live cells discovered in human breast milk could aid breast cancer research
University of Cambridge

The study was led by researchers from the Wellcome-MRC Cambridge Stem Cell Institute (CSCI) and the Department of Pharmacology at the University of Cambridge.

Released: 28-Jan-2022 10:50 AM EST
Maternity care during COVID-19: Pandemic added new challenges
Wolters Kluwer Health: Lippincott

Changes necessitated by the COVID-19 pandemic have had a wide-ranging impact on maternity care – affecting provider well-being as well as patient care, reports a study in the January/March issue of The Journal of Perinatal and Neonatal Nursing (JPNN). The journal is published in the Lippincott portfolio by Wolters Kluwer.

Newswise: Microbiome of Mother’s Vagina May Affect Infant Mortality Risk and Baby’s Development
Released: 27-Jan-2022 7:00 AM EST
Microbiome of Mother’s Vagina May Affect Infant Mortality Risk and Baby’s Development
University of Maryland School of Medicine

A new study in mice from University of Maryland School of Medicine researchers showed that an unhealthy vaginal microbiome in pregnant mothers in combination with an unhealthy diet contributed to increased pup deaths and altered development in the surviving babies.

Released: 27-Jan-2022 5:00 AM EST
Genetic and Lifestyle Calculator Reveals Which Younger Adults Are Most at Risk of Colorectal Cancer
NYU Langone Health

A new risk score can identify men and women under age 50 most likely to develop a cancer of the colon or rectum, an international study shows.

Released: 26-Jan-2022 9:00 PM EST
How listening to music can take the edge off the menopause transition
North American Menopause Society (NAMS)

As researchers continue to seek effective treatment options for menopause symptoms as alternatives to proven pharmacologic solutions, a number of innovative therapies have been shown to improve symptoms.

Newswise:Video Embedded blood-markers-can-predict-depression-in-pregnancy
VIDEO
Released: 26-Jan-2022 1:25 PM EST
Blood markers can predict depression in pregnancy
Van Andel Institute

GRAND RAPIDS, Mich. (January 26, 2022) — Signs of inflammation in the blood reliably predict and identify severe depression in pregnancy, reports a new study led by scientists at Van Andel Institute and Pine Rest Christian Mental Health Services.

20-Jan-2022 7:05 PM EST
Health-related quality-of-life differences in men and women with advanced kidney disease
American Society of Nephrology (ASN)

• At the start of a study of older adults with advanced kidney disease, women had lower average physical and mental health-related quality-of-life scores compared with men. • Over time, however, both physical and mental scores declined approximately twice as fast in men than in women.

Released: 24-Jan-2022 4:00 PM EST
Women ages 35 and younger are 44% more likely to have an ischemic stroke than male peers
American Heart Association (AHA)

Women ages 35 years and younger were 44% more likely to have an ischemic stroke (caused by blocked blood vessels in the brain) than their male counterparts, according to a new review of more than a dozen international studies on sex differences in stroke occurrence, published today in a Go Red for Women® 2022 spotlight issue of Stroke, a peer-reviewed journal of the American Stroke Association, a division of the American Heart Association.

Released: 24-Jan-2022 2:50 PM EST
UI Health doctors to study new diagnostic test for preeclampsia in Africa 
University of Illinois Chicago

Researchers from University of Illinois Chicago have received funding to study a novel diagnostic kit for preeclampsia. Preeclampsia is pregnancy-related hypertension that can occur at or after 20 weeks of pregnancy. Left untreated, preeclampsia can disrupt fetal growth and lead to preterm birth and stillbirth. In mothers, it can also cause kidney and liver failure and culminate in seizures, coma and death.

Newswise: A spouse's education can positively impact their partner's overall health, IU study finds
Released: 24-Jan-2022 10:10 AM EST
A spouse's education can positively impact their partner's overall health, IU study finds
Indiana University

Spousal education is positively related to people’s overall health, with an effect size that rivals the impact of a person’s own education, Indiana University study finds.

Released: 21-Jan-2022 11:40 AM EST
Researchers led by UCLA Health call for more work to address overlooked issues affecting women with Parkinson’s disease
University of California, Los Angeles (UCLA), Health Sciences

Researchers in a multi-institution study led by UCLA Health call for more research as well as customized treatments, education and support to empower women living with Parkinson’s disease to address their unmet medical needs.

Released: 21-Jan-2022 9:50 AM EST
New guidelines on pelvic girdle pain in the postpartum period – Journal of Women's Health Physical Therapy presents evidence-based recommendations
Wolters Kluwer Health: Lippincott

Pelvic girdle pain (PGP) is a common condition causing pain and physical impairment, which can occur during and/or after pregnancy and delivery. A new clinical practice guideline for physical therapy practice for PGP in the postpartum period (PGP-PP) is presented in the Journal of Women's Health Physical Therapy (JWHPT). The official journal of the Academy of Pelvic Health Physical Therapy (APHPT) of the American Physical Therapy Association, JWHPT is published in the Lippincott portfolio by Wolters Kluwer.

Newswise: Step Up: Walking May Reduce Type 2 Diabetes Risk for Adults 65 and Older
20-Jan-2022 10:00 AM EST
Step Up: Walking May Reduce Type 2 Diabetes Risk for Adults 65 and Older
University of California San Diego

UC San Diego Herbert Wertheim School of Public Health study reports that the more steps taken, and the more intense, the lower the risk of Type 2 diabetes among women 65 and older.

Released: 19-Jan-2022 2:00 PM EST
Gut bacteria differences between Black and white women linked to insulin sensitivity
UC Davis Health (Defunct)

A study led by UC Davis has found significant gut bacteria profile differences between Black and white women, even after accounting for their insulin sensitivity status.

Released: 18-Jan-2022 5:05 PM EST
COVID-19 may cause fetal inflammation even in absence of placental infection, researchers report
Wayne State University Division of Research

Researchers at the Wayne State University School of Medicine and the National Institutes of Health’s Perinatology Research Branch in Detroit have found that SARS-CoV-2, the virus that causes COVID-19, may cause fetal inflammation even in the absence of placental infection.

Newswise: Weight loss before infertility treatment may not increase healthy births for women with obesity
18-Jan-2022 11:10 AM EST
Weight loss before infertility treatment may not increase healthy births for women with obesity
Penn State College of Medicine

A new nationwide study led by Penn State College of Medicine found that women with obesity and unexplained infertility who lost weight prior to starting infertility treatments did not have a greater chance of having a healthy baby than those who did not lose weight prior to starting therapy.

Newswise: Changes in sleep and biological rhythms from late pregnancy to postpartum linked to depression and anxiety
Released: 18-Jan-2022 1:40 PM EST
Changes in sleep and biological rhythms from late pregnancy to postpartum linked to depression and anxiety
McMaster University

In the largest observational study to date investigating changes in sleep and biological rhythms during the peripartum period, researchers identified several variables that are linked to depression and anxiety. Most notably, changes in the circadian quotient (the strength of the circadian rhythms), the average amount of activity during nighttime rest, and the amount of fragmentation of nighttime rest were strongly linked to higher depressive and anxiety symptoms.Researchers recruited 100 women, 73 of whom they followed from the start of the third trimester to three months postpartum. They analyzed subjective and objective measures of sleep, biological rhythms, melatonin levels, and light exposure using a variety of tools, including questionnaires, actigraphs (wearable sleep monitors), laboratory assays, and other methods.

Newswise: Study reveals why cervical cancer screening rates are declining, which populations are most affected
14-Jan-2022 1:30 PM EST
Study reveals why cervical cancer screening rates are declining, which populations are most affected
University of Texas Health Science Center at Houston

Rates of cervical cancer screening have dropped in the U.S., with screening rates lowest among Asian and Hispanic women, as well as women who live in rural areas, don’t have insurance, or identify as LGBQ+, according to researchers with The University of Texas Health Science Center at Houston (UTHealth Houston).

Released: 17-Jan-2022 4:05 PM EST
مخاطر القلب والأوعية الدموية قد تصبح أسوأ على مهارات التفكير والذاكرة لدى النساء في منتصف العمر
Mayo Clinic

مدينة روتشستر، ولاية مينيسوتا- أمراض القلب مثل مرض الشريان التاجي وعوامل الخطر القلبية الوعائية مثل مرض السكري وارتفاع الكوليسترول مرتبطة بشكل أقوى بتراجع الذاكرة ومهارات التفكير في منتصف العمر لدى النساء مقارنة بالرجال، بحسب دراسة أجرتها مايو كلينك، على الرغم من انتشار هذه الحالات بشكل أكبر بين الرجال. هذا البحث منشور في مجلة علم الأعصاب، المجلة الطبية للأكاديمية الأمريكية لطب الأعصاب.

Released: 17-Jan-2022 4:05 PM EST
心血管风险对中年女性思维和记忆能力的影响更甚
Mayo Clinic

妙佑医疗国际(Mayo Clinic)的一项研究表明,相较于对男性的影响,心脏病(如冠状动脉疾病)和心血管风险因素(如糖尿病和高胆固醇)对中年女性记忆和思维能力下降的影响更甚,尽管这些疾病在男性中的患病率更高。这项研究已发表在美国神经病学学会的医学杂志《神经病学》(Neurology)上。

Released: 17-Jan-2022 4:05 PM EST
Os riscos cardiovasculares podem ser piores para as habilidades de raciocínio e memória em mulheres de meia-idade
Mayo Clinic

Problemas cardíacos como a doença arterial coronariana e fatores de risco cardiovasculares como diabetes e colesterol alto têm maior associação com declínio nas habilidades de memória e raciocínio durante a meia-idade para mulheres do que para homens, mostra um estudo da Mayo Clinic.

Released: 13-Jan-2022 4:50 PM EST
妙佑医疗国际问与答:药物和补充剂会产生相互作用吗?
Mayo Clinic

亲爱的妙佑医疗国际(Mayo Clinic):随着年龄的增长,医生给我开的药越来越多,比如血压和胆固醇的药物。另外,随着年龄的增长,我服用了一些用来提高记忆力、降低胆固醇和预防癌症的补充剂。我是否应该担心这些补充剂会与我的药物产生相互作用?

Released: 13-Jan-2022 4:45 PM EST
Preguntas y respuestas de Mayo Clinic: ¿Puede haber interacción entre medicamentos y suplementos?
Mayo Clinic

ESTIMADA MAYO CLINIC: A medida que envejezco, los médicos me recetan más medicamentos, por ejemplo, para la presión arterial y el colesterol. Además, según me voy haciendo mayor, he decidido tomar suplementos que supuestamente mejoran la memoria, reducen el colesterol y previenen el cáncer.

Released: 13-Jan-2022 4:40 PM EST
أسئلة وإجابات مايو كلينك: هل يمكن أن تتفاعل الأدوية والمكملات مع بعضها بعضًا؟
Mayo Clinic

السادة الأعزاء في مايو كلينك: مع تقدمي في السن، أعطاني الأطباء المزيد من الأدوية، مثل علاج ضغط الدم والكوليسترول. أيضًا، مع تقدمي في العمر، اخترت تناول بعض المكملات التي يُفترض أن تحسن ذاكرتي، وتقلل الكوليسترول وتقي من السرطان.

Released: 13-Jan-2022 4:35 PM EST
Perguntas e respostas da Mayo Clinic: pode haver interação entre medicamentos e suplementos?
Mayo Clinic

ESTIMADA MAYO CLINIC: conforme fui envelhecendo, os médicos passaram a me prescrever mais medicamentos para o controle da pressão sanguínea e colesterol, por exemplo.

Newswise:Video Embedded young-black-women-have-lower-microvascular-function-across-the-menstrual-cycle
VIDEO
Released: 13-Jan-2022 3:30 PM EST
Young Black Women Have Lower Microvascular Function across the Menstrual Cycle
American Physiological Society (APS)

Microvascular function, which is the measurement of how healthy the arteries are throughout a person’s body, is lower in Black women compared to white women throughout the menstrual cycle, according to researchers at the University of Delaware.

Released: 13-Jan-2022 3:25 PM EST
Covid-19 linked to complications during pregnancy, study finds
University of Edinburgh

Women who have Covid-19 towards the end of their pregnancy are vulnerable to birth-related complications.

Released: 13-Jan-2022 3:05 PM EST
Riesgos cardiovasculares podrían empeorar la capacidad de pensamiento y memoria en mujeres de mediana edad
Mayo Clinic

Las afecciones cardíacas, como la enfermedad arterial coronaria, y los factores de riesgo cardiovascular, como la diabetes y el colesterol alto, tienen una relación más fuerte con el deterioro de la capacidad de pensamiento y memoria en las mujeres de mediana edad que en los hombres

Released: 13-Jan-2022 12:55 PM EST
Being overweight may cause more UK hospital admissions than previously thought, finds new study
University of Bristol

Being overweight may cause more hospital admissions and higher incidences of disease and mortality than previous studies report, according to new University of Bristol research. The study, published in Economics and Human Biology, used a genetic technique to identify the sole impact of body composition on hospital admissions from over 300,000 people.

Newswise: Gabriela Meléndez-Peláez to Receive 2022 Penn Nursing Renfield Foundation Award for Global Women’s Health
Released: 13-Jan-2022 12:05 PM EST
Gabriela Meléndez-Peláez to Receive 2022 Penn Nursing Renfield Foundation Award for Global Women’s Health
University of Pennsylvania School of Nursing

Gabriela Meléndez-Peláez, a Guatemalan nurse-midwife, maternal health advocate, and the Founder of Asociación Corazón del Agua, will receive the 2022 Penn Nursing Renfield Foundation Award for Global Women’s Health for her tireless work in addressing maternal health inequities in Guatemala. The award ceremony will be held virtually on March 29, 2022.

10-Jan-2022 3:05 PM EST
For new mothers, feeling low in social status poses risk to health
American Psychological Association (APA)

When it comes to the link between socioeconomic status and health, perception can be as important as reality. A study published by the American Psychological Association finds that new mothers who see themselves as lower on the socioeconomic ladder have worse health outcomes one year after their child’s birth than new mothers who see themselves as higher status.

Released: 12-Jan-2022 5:20 PM EST
Severity of menopause symptoms can affect a woman's cognitive performance
North American Menopause Society (NAMS)

Menopause is often accompanied by an array of symptoms that can detract from a woman’s quality of life.

Newswise: Metabolic vulnerabilities could be new targets for metastatic breast cancer
Released: 12-Jan-2022 4:55 PM EST
Metabolic vulnerabilities could be new targets for metastatic breast cancer
UT Southwestern Medical Center

Metabolic differences could explain why some metastatic breast cancer cells rapidly generate tumors after migrating from primary tumors to the brain, while others linger for months or years before forming these secondary tumors, UT Southwestern scientists report in a new study. The findings, published in Cell Metabolism, highlight metabolic vulnerabilities in malignant cells that could eventually lead to new cancer therapies.

Released: 12-Jan-2022 1:35 PM EST
Moffitt Researchers Unlock Immune Cell Contributions that Could Lead to New Therapies for Endometrial Cancer
Moffitt Cancer Center

Endometrial cancer is the most common cancer of the female reproductive system. Patients who have active immune responses against cancer cells tend to have better outcomes, but much of what is known focuses on only one type of immune cell called T cells. In a new study published in Cancer Research, Moffitt Cancer Center researchers provide insight on the role of B cell immunity in endometrial cancer.

Released: 12-Jan-2022 12:00 PM EST
MD Anderson Research Highlights for January 12, 2022
University of Texas MD Anderson Cancer Center

The University of Texas MD Anderson Cancer Center’s Research Highlights provides a glimpse into recently published studies in basic, translational and clinical cancer research from MD Anderson experts. Current advances include an anti-CD19 chimeric antigen receptor (CAR) T cell therapy to treat follicular lymphoma, targeted therapies for urothelial cancers and advanced breast cancers, understanding the tumor microenvironment and immune landscape in pancreatic cancer, a link between depression risk and androgen deprivation for prostate cancer, and the discovery of new therapeutic targets for Alzheimer’s disease, liver cancer and aggressive breast cancer.

Newswise: New treatment target ID’d for radiation-resistant cervical cancer
Released: 12-Jan-2022 11:10 AM EST
New treatment target ID’d for radiation-resistant cervical cancer
Washington University in St. Louis

Understanding how cells die is key to developing new treatments for many diseases, whether the goal is to make cancer cells die or keep healthy cells alive in the face of other illnesses, such as massive infections or strokes. Two new studies from Washington University School of Medicine in St. Louis have identified a previously unrecognized pathway of cell death — named lysoptosis — and demonstrate how it could lead to new therapies for cervical cancer.

Released: 11-Jan-2022 5:10 PM EST
Chemical Commonly Found in Consumer Products May Disrupt a Hormone Needed for Healthy Pregnancy
Rutgers University-New Brunswick

Exposure to phthalates—a group of chemicals found in everything from plastics to personal care products to electronics—may disrupt an important hormone needed to sustain a healthy pregnancy, according to a Rutgers study.

Newswise: A New Year’s Resolution for Moms-to-Be: Know Your (BP) Numbers
Released: 10-Jan-2022 8:05 AM EST
A New Year’s Resolution for Moms-to-Be: Know Your (BP) Numbers
Rutgers Robert Wood Johnson Medical School

Managing your blood pressure is an important part of a healthy lifestyle, but for women who are pregnant or planning to become pregnant in the new year, it is particularly crucial, especially in light of a new study showing chronic hypertension as a driver of maternal mortality in the U.S., a Rutgers obstetrician says.



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