MEDICAL

May 31 2026TECHNOLOGY

Finding the Brain’s Leak-Proof Door: A Faster Way to Scan Water Flow

The human brain is wrapped in a tight shield called the blood-brain barrier. Its job is to block harmful stuff while letting in water and nutrients. When this barrier leaks even a little, the brain can get hurt. Scientists want to measure how fast water moves in and out—not to crack the door open, b

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May 31 2026TECHNOLOGY

A New Way to Help Patients Walk Again

Helping people regain their ability to walk after an injury isn’t easy. Traditional rehabilitation can be slow, and some patients struggle to regain full movement. A new kind of robotic suit might change that. This lightweight exoskeleton helps patients relearn how to walk by gently guiding their le

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May 31 2026HEALTH

Understanding the differences in heart risks between men and women

The heart doesn't beat the same way for everyone. Scientists have noticed that women often face higher risks from certain dangerous heart rhythms, like torsades de pointes. This happens more when a person's heart has less ability to recover between beats. But why? And how much more risk do women rea

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May 30 2026HEALTH

Stressed Doctors, Strong Work Ethic: What Happens in Residency

Residency is a tough stretch where new doctors take on more patient care and decision‑making. During this time, their stress levels can rise while their enthusiasm for work may shift too. Researchers used a well‑known theory that links job pressure and support to worker health. They followe

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May 30 2026POLITICS

Trump’s Health Report: A Mixed Picture

The White House released a new health report for former President Trump. It shows a high score on brain tests and good cholesterol levels. The report claims his heart is 14 years younger than his age. However, the new document leaves out details that were in last year’s file. Last year men

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May 30 2026HEALTH

Trump’s Health Check: A Closer Look

President Donald Trump recently visited Walter Reed National Military Medical Center for his third in‑person medical exam in a little over a year. The White House physician, Dr. Sean Barbabella, released a memo stating that the former president is “in excellent health” and fully capable of performin

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May 30 2026HEALTH

A Little Touch of Magic

The writer once imagined a typewriter that could make what it typed happen. A line he wrote in 1987 about rainbows and roses in Dallas somehow came true, though not exactly as pictured. The story centers on a baby girl born in 1987 after her mother’s emergency surgery because of severe high blood

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May 30 2026HEALTH

What works best for healing thoracolumbar burst fractures: surgery or rest?

When someone breaks their back in a bad fall or car crash, doctors have two main ways to help: either perform surgery to fix the bones or let the body heal itself with bracing and rest. A recent study looked at people with specific types of spine injuries called A3 and A4 thoracolumbar burst fractur

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May 30 2026BUSINESS

Heart Pump Patent Battle: Who Really Wins in Court?

A major medical device company just won a court case that could shape how heart pumps get made in the future. A jury decided that Abiomed’s Impella heart pumps don’t break Maquet’s patent rules. Even more surprising? The jury said Maquet’s patent itself wasn’t even valid. That’s a double win for Abi

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May 30 2026TECHNOLOGY

A New Push for Homegrown Medical Isotopes

A nuclear tech firm from Albuquerque is taking steps to build a production site near Eunice, New Mexico. Its goal is to create isotopes that hospitals rely on for scans and treatments. Right now, the U. S. gets all its Molybdenum-99 from old reactors overseas. That supply isn’t stable—if something g

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