Duke University professor Amanda Randles won for her work with supercomputers and algorithms, creating blood flow simulations ...
Feeling angry constricts blood vessels in unhealthy ways and could raise a person's long-term odds for heart disease, new ...
indicate that Uganda’s annual heart and circulatory disease deaths doubled in the last three decades. The deaths increased from 14,463 to 28,149 between 1990 and 2019, according to our assessment of ...
A new study has found that people who adhere to a healthy pro-vegetarian diet have a lower risk of all-cause mortality and ...
Could vaping just one time put you at higher risk of heart failure? More research is pointing to the dangers of e-cigarettes.
Microorganisms in the digestive tract may help reduce heart disease risk by helping the body process cholesterol, a new study ...
If those same people were to choose just one simple step — reducing their salt intake — there could be a dramatic decrease in ...
On May 10, fellow musicians are going to perform for Teddy B., staging a benefit concert at Martell’s Tiki Bar in Point ...
New research suggests that regularly getting angry may increase your risk of cardiovascular disease and stroke. Here’s why.
The phrase “anger kills” might have a more literal meaning: New research suggests a possible reason frequent anger has been linked to an increased risk of cardiovascular disease. The study, published ...
Research from the 1980s and 1990s found a decreased risk of heart disease in women who took hormone therapy, according to Dr.
In a recent study published in the Journal of the American Heart Association, a team of researchers investigated ... the association between core negative emotions and cardiovascular disease events.