DIAGNOSIS

Jun 02 2026EDUCATION

Skin signs that tell more than meets the eye

TV dramas often show doctors missing obvious clues. In one episode, a patient’s rash appears days before fever and confusion set in. The team focuses on the confusion and forgets to check the skin. Only when the detective work catches up does someone notice the tiny purple spots—late clues to a dead

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Jun 01 2026HEALTH

AI Helps Spot Illnesses, But Human Touch Still Wins the Care Game

A dad worries about his little kid’s fever and ear pain, while an older woman feels out of breath during her morning stroll. Both pull up their phones and type the symptoms into an AI chatbot. The screen pops up: “Your child probably has an ear infection, ” and “You might be dealing with a heart iss

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May 26 2026SCIENCE

Sex and Gender: Hidden Keys to Smarter Cancer Care

The way we think about cancer has changed. Doctors now know that who you are and how you live can shape the disease in ways that were once ignored. Sex—defined by chromosomes, hormones and body parts—has a direct impact on how tumors grow, how the immune system fights them, and how patients feel aft

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May 26 2026HEALTH

The ADHD numbers keep rising—what’s really changing?

For years, ADHD was mostly linked to kids who couldn’t sit still. Now, adults—especially women—are getting diagnosed long after childhood. Why? One big reason might be that doctors are finally listening instead of dismissing complaints about forgetfulness or messy thoughts as “just stress” or “bad h

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May 24 2026HEALTH

Bardet-Biedl Syndrome Gets a Fresh Diagnostic Checklist

Doctors dealing with rare genetic conditions often struggle to pinpoint diagnoses quickly. Bardet-Biedl syndrome (BBS) has long been tricky to identify because its symptoms overlap with several other disorders. After years of research, specialists have now agreed on clearer rules for spotting BBS ea

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May 23 2026HEALTH

When doctors struggle to spot child abuse signs

Every year, millions of children worldwide face a hidden crisis—sexual abuse—but spotting it isn’t always straightforward. Doctors often meet young patients with unusual marks or discomfort in private areas, situations that might look like abuse at first glance. Yet many of these cases turn out to b

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May 22 2026HEALTH

Pain beyond the gut: How science is trying to crack the code of chronic belly pain

Every fifth adult carries a daily burden that stays hidden unless they decide to speak up. The ache isn’t in an arm or a leg; it’s deep inside the belly, turning everyday meals into possible threats and nights into endurance tests. For many, this pain is a guest that never leaves, yet doctors often

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May 20 2026HEALTH

AI Helps Spot Skin Cancer With Clear Reasoning

A new artificial‑intelligence tool can now examine skin images and flag possible basal cell carcinoma. The system learns from thousands of pictures, learning patterns that doctors look for. What makes it special is that it also tells why it made each decision, showing the key spots on the imag

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May 13 2026HEALTH

Ewing and Other Small‑Round Tumors: What the DNA Tells Us

Ewing sarcoma is a fast‑growing bone tumor that shows up mostly in teenagers and young adults. It carries a special genetic swap, called a FET::ETS rearrangement, that scientists can spot with a test. \ Other tumors that look the same under the microscope – the non‑Ewing small‑round cell sarco

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May 04 2026HEALTH

Checking a Common Neck Pain Guide

Back in 2003, a simple checklist was made to help doctors spot neck pain that shoots down the arm. The checklist looks for four clues: pain that moves when you lift your arm, a specific spot of numbness in one finger, a weak muscle in your arm, and a certain test that makes the pain travel when your

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