For more than 25 years, lab-on-a-chip technology has allowed researchers to model human organs and blood vessels using real ...
A “Chinese heart” could be helping to save lives in the United States despite efforts to decouple the two countries’ biotechnology sectors as a result of rising political tensions. The fully ...
Nancy Wells crossed the finish line of the 2025 Glass City Half Marathon in Toledo, Ohio, feeling elated. That in itself wouldn’t be unique—for one, the now 55-year-old has run over 60 marathons and ...
You’re likely familiar with getting your blood pressure taken, the cuff squeezing your arm before generating two numbers. Yet this vital sign contains a third, lesser-known number that matters for ...
The parents of a 13-year-old Oregon girl have filed a $17 million lawsuit against Oregon Health & Science University, contending that their daughter’s heart wouldn’t restart after surgical staff at ...
May 29 (Reuters) - Johnson & Johnson's (JNJ.N), opens new tab medical device subsidiary Abiomed has won a jury trial in Massachusetts over allegations that it violated Maquet Cardiovascular's patent ...
Share on Pinterest Research suggests aerobic and combined training can significantly reduce 24-hour blood pressure. Image credit: Thomas Barwick/Getty Images Research links combined aerobic and ...
Results from the first randomized trial of Impella pumps during complex stent procedures, published in the New England Journal of Medicine, have shown that the pumps offer no significant benefit to ...
Netflix announces The Ribbon Hero (2026), a stunning modern tribute to Osamu Tezuka’s classic Princess Knight.
The beating of the heart stops cancers from growing in this organ in mice, reports a study published today in Science 1. This could explain why tumours affecting the heart are so rare in mammals, ...
High blood pressure is called the "silent killer" for a reason—you can feel perfectly fine while it quietly increases your risk of a heart attack or stroke. The good news is that bringing your numbers ...
When you get up out of a chair, your blood pressure instantly increases to compensate for the movement and keep you from fainting. For decades researchers thought neurons called baroreceptors in ...