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191 Results for search "Heart / Stroke-Related: Stroke".

Health News Results - 191

Female stroke victims are less likely than men to take drugs that could lower their odds of a second stroke.

Women are 80% more likely to report that they don’t take cholesterol-lowering medications as prescribed, a new study shows.

They’re also 53% more likely to not take blood thinners that co...

Breathing in smoggy air over time can significantly raise a person's chances for dangerous blood clots, new research shows.

“What’s striking from our study is the increase in serious blood clotting disease with exposure to some of the most common types of pollutants in the air we breathe,” said study lead author

  • Ernie Mundell HealthDay Reporter
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  • December 13, 2024
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  • Actor Jamie Foxx has shared the details of a life-threatening medical emergency he experienced last year after doctors discovered he had suffered a brain bleed.

    In his new Netflix comedy special, “What Had Happened Was,” Jamie Foxx finally described what left him fighting for his life in 2023, Variety magazine

    People with diabetes who are taking GLP-1 meds such as Ozempic or Mounjaro may be getting an added bonus: Reductions in their odds for a dangerous blood clot, new research finds.

    The study found that folks with diab...

    Some people develop epilepsy after surviving a stroke, as the injury they’ve sustained causes scarring and disorganized electrical activity in their brains.

    But one type of blood pressure medication seems to help stroke survivors avoid post-stroke epilepsy (PSE), according to a first-of-its-kind study prese...

    Stroke survivors have an 80% increased risk of dementia compared to people who’ve never suffered a stroke, a new study finds.

    About 19% of people who’d had a stroke developed dementia during an average six-year follow-up, compared with just 13% of those with no stroke, researchers reported Dec. 4 in the journal

  • Dennis Thompson HealthDay Reporter
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  • December 6, 2024
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  • Certain hormone replacement therapy pills appear to increase the risk of heart disease and serious blood clots in women going through menopause, a new study says.

    Estrogen/progestin pills increased women&...

    Folks with irregular sleep patterns might have an increased risk of a heart attack or stroke, a new study says.

    People who doze off and wake up at extremely varied times day by day have a 26% increased risk of a potentially fatal heart-related health emergency, results show....

    Women, especially those who had high blood pressure during pregnancy or entered menopause before age 45, are among those with a greater risk for stroke.

    They and other high-risk groups are the focus of new stroke prevention

  • Carole Tanzer Miller HealthDay Reporter
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  • November 25, 2024
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  • Even when e-cigarettes are nicotine-free, they have an immediate effect on blood vessels, a new imaging study shows.

    "E-cigarettes have long been marketed as a safer alternative to regular tobacco smoking," said Dr. Ma...

    Nearly 1 in every 10 American adults is living with high levels of cholesterol in their arteries, according to the latest report from the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.

    The data, from 2021 through 2023, found that 11.3% of adults have high total cholesterol -- a number that's held relatively steady since the introduction of

  • Ernie Mundell HealthDay Reporter
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  • November 20, 2024
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  • For the 4 in 10 patients with newly diagnosed heart failure who also have the heart rhythm disorder atrial fibrillation, the prognosis can be poor.

    "Atrial fibrillation can make heart failure much more problematic, and more complex to treat," said researcher

  • Carole Tanzer Miller HealthDay Reporter
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  • November 20, 2024
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  • Japanese researchers say they have found a pill that works as well as existing medication to prevent blood clots after heart valve surgery, with fewer trips to the doctor.

    Unlike warfarin, the standard treatment,

  • Carole Tanzer Miller HealthDay Reporter
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  • November 19, 2024
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  • People using blood thinners to control their heart rhythm shouldn't expect the medications to head off thinking declines as well, new research suggests.

    The study, presented Saturday at a meeting of the American Heart Association in Chicago, is the first lar...

    People on blood thinners have a doubled risk of dangerous internal bleeding if they also take a non-steroidal anti-inflammatory drug (NSAID) like ibuprofen or naproxen, a new study warns.

    People typically are prescribed blood thinners to treat or prevent strokes, heart attacks, or blood clots in the legs or lungs...

    A trio of risk factors not only increase your risk of stroke, but they also raise the odds that such a stroke will be debilitating, a new study warns.

    What are these three big dangers? Smoking, having high blood pressure and suffering from atrial fibrillat...

    The weight-loss drug Ozempic can help reduce stroke patients’ risk of a heart attack or death, a new study says.

    GLP-1 weight-loss drugs like Ozempic or SGLT2 diabetes medications like

  • Dennis Thompson HealthDay Reporter
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  • November 11, 2024
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  • Doctors might be overprescribing sedatives to stroke survivors, a new study warns.

    About 5% of people are prescribed a benzodiazepine following a stroke, to help calm anxiety and improve sleep, researchers found. Benzodiazepine meds include Valium, Ativan ...

    An off-label clot-busting drug appears to work slightly better in treating stroke patients than an approved medication, a new review finds.

    The clot-buster tenecteplase is associated with a slightly...

    You've broken a hip and rehabilitation is part of the way back to mobility, or your partner has suffered a stroke and needs help re-learning certain skills.

    These scenarios play out every day for Americans, and rehabilitation therapies are often needed. But what kind of therapy is best, and where can you find it?

    One expert has tips on finding the best rehab for you.

    A severe COVID infection can increase a person’s risk of heart attack and stroke as much as a history of heart disease, a new study says.

    People hospitalized for COVID had about the same risk of a major cardiac event as people with heart disease who never had COVID, researchers found.

    Res...

    Want to keep a stroke a bay? Drink water, nothing fizzy and skip fruit drinks.

    That's the key takeaway from a global review that also raises a red flag for people who drink more than four cups of coffee a day.

    "While [high blood pressure] is the most important risk factor, our stroke risk can also be lowered through healthy lifestyle choices in diet and physical activity," said lead...

    Stroke rates continue to rise among adults and children living with sickle cell disease, despite new standards of care meant to lower their risk, a new study finds.

    People with sickle cell are vulnerable to strokes caused by a blood vessel to the brain either bursting or bec...

    Climate change and worsening diets are sending global rates of stroke and stroke deaths skyward, a new study warns.

    Almost 12 million people worldwide had a stroke in 2021, up 70% since 1990, according to a team led by Valery Feigin, of the Auckland University of Technology in New Zealand.

    It's now the third leading cause of d...

    Folks who are content with what they’ve got could be less likely to suffer a heart attack or stroke, a new study suggests.

    “Our findings support a holistic approach to health care, where enhancing a person’s mental and emotional well-being is considered an ...

    A few cups of coffee each morning can help protect a person against heart disease, stroke and type 2 diabetes, a new study says.

    Drinking three cups of coffee a day -- or about 200 to 300 milligrams of caffeine -- lowered the risk of health problems linked to the heart or metabolism, researchers found.

    “The findings highlight that promoting moderate amounts of coffee or caffei...

    The number of Americans with a potentially dangerous heart rhythm condition is three times greater than previously thought, a new study claims.

    An estimated 5% of the population -- 10.5 million U.S. adults -- have atrial fibrillation, according to new estimates from the University of California, San Fra...

    Black stroke victims are arriving at emergency rooms much later than white patients, greatly increasing their risk of death or lifelong disability, a new study finds.

    Every second counts when it comes to treating a stroke, experts say.

    Any moment’s delay ...

    Less than half of people who've survived a stroke will go on to have a healthy, normal sleep pattern, new research shows.

    Normal sleep is defined as six to eight hours of shuteye nightly. However, a majority of the nearly 1,600 stroke survivors in the new study got either too much or too little sleep.

    “Sleeping the right amount is considered essential for ideal brain and hear...

    A wearable heart monitor raises the detection rate of the dangerous irregular heartbeat known as atrial fibrillation (A-fib) by more than 50%, a new study finds.

    Unfortunately, there was no increase observed in the number of strokes prevented after folks got the devices, the researchers noted.

  • Ernie Mundell HealthDay Reporter
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  • September 4, 2024
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  • Recreational drug users are three times more likely to have repeated heart health emergencies than people who don’t use, a new study has found.

    About 11% of patients admitted to intensive cardiac care units have been using recreational drugs, said researcher Dr. Raphael Mirail...

    An experimental genetic test can gauge a person’s risk of developing potentially deadly blood clots, researchers report.

    People who scored high on the test had more than double the rate of heart attack, stroke and major amputation after they underwent a procedure to re...

    Drinking can increase a senior’s risk of a brain bleed following a fall, even if they only occasionally imbibe, a new study finds.

    In fact, the risk of a brain bleed increases with a senior’s level of drinking, researchers found.

    Occasional or weekly drinking doubled a pers...

    There's more evidence to suggest that the common artificial sweetener erythritol might pose dangers to consumers' hearts.

    The new study, involving 20 healthy adult volunteers, found that at doses commonly found in an erythritol-sweetened soda or muffin, the sweetener was linked to heightened activity of blood platelets, which could make clots more likely.

    No such effect was seen wi...

    New research has added two conditions to the list of 12 risk factors that boost the chances of a dementia diagnosis.

    The good news? You can guard against the development of both and researchers offer advice on exactly how to do that.

    In a study published Wednesday in 

  • Robin Foster HealthDay Reporter
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  • August 1, 2024
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  • Puttering around the home or office isn’t enough to protect a person from stroke, a new study says.

    People need to be more active to lower their stroke risk, either by exercising in their free time or biking or walking to work, results show.

    “Physical activity during leisure time and as transportation is becoming increasingly important now that many jobs and domestic ac...

    Having high blood pressure in adulthood greatly raises the odds for multiple types of stroke, a new study confirms.

    “Our results suggest that early diagnosis and sustained control of high blood pressure over the lifespan are critical to preventing stroke, ischemic stroke a...

    Hispanic people -- particularly those without insurance -- are less likely to get the additional care needed to recover from a stroke, a new study finds.

    Hispanic folks are less likely to be treated at a rehab facility or receive home health care following hospitaliz...

    There's good news and bad for stroke survival in the United States: New research shows that Americans are now more likely to survive long-term, but that's more true for whites than for Black Americans.

    At least for a sample of people living in the greater Cincinnati area, "we saw that there clearly has been an improvement in five-year mortality [death] after stroke, and it probably is at ...

    Sleep apnea is particularly dangerous for the heart health of young adults, even more so than in older folks, a new study warns.

    The link between sleep apnea and risk factors for heart disease is stronger in people between 20 and 40 years of age than in those 40 and older, researchers reported recently in the Journ...

    For decades, millions of Americans popped a low-dose aspirin each day to lower their heart risks.

    Then, accumulated data prompted the nation's two leading cardiology groups -- the American College of Cardiology and the American Heart Association -- to overturn advisories in 2019 and...

    A lonely middle and old age could bring higher odds for a stroke, new data suggests.

    A 12-year study of people over 50 found that those who experienced chronic loneliness were 56% more likely to have a stroke, versus those who said they weren't lonely.

    "Loneliness is increasingly considered a major public health issue. Our findings further highlight why that is,"said study lead auth...

    Everyday tasks like taking a shower or navigating stairs can be risky business for folks in the aftermath of a stroke.

    But grab bars, shower seats, ramps and other safety interventions allow many to live independently and reduce the risk of premature death, new research confirms. 

    One in eight stroke survivors die within a year of leaving the hospital.

    "The transition per...

    A new smartphone tool could help paramedics identify a stroke in seconds by scanning the patient's face.

    The AI-driven tool analyzes facial symmetry and specific muscle movements to detect subtle signs of stroke, researchers explained.

    "One of the key parameter...

    When there's pain, pressure and pounding in your head, you might think the worst: Is it a brain tumor?

    Probably not, a Penn State physician assures. 

    Headache in and of itself is not a common sign of a tumor, because the brain itself doesn't feel pain, said Dr. John Messmer, medical director at Penn State H...

    Higher amounts of the artificial sweetener xylitol might raise the risk of heart attack and stroke, a new study warns.

    Xylitol is a zero-calorie sugar alcohol commonly used in sugar-free candy, chewing gum, baked goods and toothpastes, researchers said.

    But high blood ...

    Common drugs used to control cholesterol, blood sugar and high blood pressure might also lower a person's risk of stroke, a new study finds.

    The researchers evaluated the risk of brain aneurysms that cause bleeding strokes in patients.

    For the study, they looke...

    Less than one-quarter of people who survive serious heart conditions receive the dietary counseling needed to protect their future health, a new study finds.

    Only about 23% of people treated for major illnesses like heart attack and heart failure receive counseling on their ...

    The rate at which Americans under the age of 65 suffered a stroke rose by about 15% between 2011 and 2022, new government data shows.

    That was true even among the young: The rate of stroke jumped 14.6% among people ages 18 to 44 during the study period, researchers from the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention found.

    It's not clear why stroke rates have risen so sharply, ...

    Ultra-processed foods are bad for more than your waistline: New research shows they seem to raise the risk of stroke and dementia-related memory or thinking problems.

    A 10% increase in the amount of ultra-processed foods a person eats is associated with a 16% higher risk of cognitive problems, researchers f...