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Blood Pressure Trajectory in Children From Birth Through Childhood

Higher blood pressure at birth and childhood was associated with a higher risk of hypertension later in life in this ENVIRONAGE study, which tracked BP from birth through childhood.


Question Is blood pressure (BP) at birth and in early childhood associated with BP in later childhood?

Findings In this cohort study of 500 children with BP measured at birth, preschool age (4−6 years), and school age (9−11 years), BP tracked over time. The risk of elevated BP and hypertension at preschool age and school age was associated with BP levels at birth and early childhood.

How scientists are turning thyme into precision medicine

Thyme extract is packed with health-promoting compounds, but it is difficult to control and easy to waste. Researchers created a new technique that traps tiny amounts of the extract inside microscopic capsules, preventing evaporation and irritation. The method delivers consistent nanodoses and could eventually be used in medicines or food products. It may also work for many other natural extracts.

Lymph Node Dissection Guidelines and Survival in Lung Adenocarcinoma

Guideline-adherent lymph node dissection provided a small survival benefit for patients with high-grade or no lepidic pattern LungAdenocarcinoma, but not for those with lepidic pattern alone.


Importance Lymph node dissection for early-stage lung adenocarcinoma is controversial. Histologic pattern subtyping reveals heterogeneity of lung adenocarcinoma, yet its association with lymph node involvement and dissection is understudied.

Objective To assess the association between guideline-adherent lymph node dissection, histologic pattern subtyping, and overall survival in patients with clinical T1N0M0 lung adenocarcinoma.

Design, Setting, and Participants This multicenter cohort study used data from the National Cancer Center LungReal database, a multicenter, electronic health records-based database for patients undergoing surgery for lung cancer, from January 2014 to December 2021, with the last follow-up in December 2022. Patients were categorized based on histologic pattern of adenocarcinoma into 2 groups: lepidic without high-grade pattern, and high-grade or no lepidic pattern. The data analysis was performed from April to November 2025.

New “Cancer Flashlight” Could Reveal Who Truly Benefits From Targeted Treatments

A University of Missouri scientist develops a cancer “flashlight” that helps identify which patients are most likely to respond to targeted therapies. To better understand which patients may respond to targeted cancer therapies, a University of Missouri researcher is developing a new way to make

Immune-targeting vaccine shows promise intercepting cancer in patients with Lynch Syndrome

The investigational cancer vaccine, NOUS-209, was found to safely stimulate the immune system to target precancerous and cancerous cells in individuals with Lynch Syndrome (LS), according to a study from researchers at The University of Texas MD Anderson Cancer Center.

The results of a Phase Ib/II clinical trial, published today in Nature Medicine, provide early evidence that immune-based approaches, such as NOUS-209, may be able to intercept cancer before it develops, offering a potential new avenue for preventive care for high-risk individuals.

“Current management strategies for Lynch Syndrome patients—frequent screenings or elective preventive surgery—are life-changing interventions that help prevent cancer development but can significantly affect quality of life,” said principal investigator Eduardo Vilar-Sanchez, M.D., Ph.D., chair ad interim of Clinical Cancer Prevention. “By teaching the immune system to recognize and attack abnormal cells, this therapy offers a promising new approach to this patient population, who face a significantly higher risk of colorectal, endometrial, urothelial and other cancers.”

What immune differences distinguish latent autoimmune diabetes in adults from type 1 diabetes?

Ivan I. Golodnikov & team report a calmer immune response in slower autoimmune diabetes, offering insight into why some patients lose insulin production more gradually:

The figure shows an atlas of PBMC from healthy donors and patients with latent autoimmune diabetes mellitus (LADA) and Type1 Diabetes (T1D).


Address correspondence to: Ivan I. Golodnikov, 11 Dm. Ulyanova Street, 117,036 Moscow, Russian. Phone: 7.985.352.05.75; Email: miloru9@gmail.com.

Find articles by Golodnikov, I. in: | Google Scholar

1Endocrinology Research Centre, Moscow, Russia.

New Mega-Analysis Reveals Why Memory Declines With Age

A landmark international study that pooled brain scans and memory tests from thousands of adults has shed new light on how structural brain changes are tied to memory decline as people age.

The findings — based on more than 10,000 MRI scans and over 13,000 memory assessments from 3,700 cognitively healthy adults across 13 studies — show that the connection between shrinking brain tissue and declining memory is nonlinear, stronger in older adults, and not solely driven by known Alzheimer’s-associated genes like APOE ε4. This suggests that brain aging is more complex than previously thought, and that memory vulnerability reflects broad structural changes across multiple regions, not just isolated pathology.

Published in Nature Communications, the study, “Vulnerability to memory decline in aging revealed by a mega-analysis of structural brain change,” found that structural brain change associated with memory decline is widespread, rather than confined to a single region. While the hippocampus showed the strongest association between volume loss and declining memory performance, many other cortical and subcortical regions also demonstrated significant relationships. This suggests that cognitive decline in aging reflects a distributed macrostructural brain vulnerability, rather than deterioration in a few specific brain regions. The pattern across regions formed a gradient, with the hippocampus at the high end and progressively smaller but still meaningful effects across large portions of the brain.

https://www.nature.com/articles/s41467-025-66354-y


Genetic risk for Alzheimer’s and widespread brain shrinkage linked to greater memory loss — even in otherwise healthy adults.

Mitochondrial DNA‐Mediated Immune Activation After Resuscitation From Cardiac Arrest

EV‐encapsulated mtDNA activates immune cells after cardiac arrest, revealing new targets to modulate post-resuscitation inflammation. @UBuffalo @Jacobs_Med_UB


BackgroundPostcardiac arrest syndrome is characterized by systemic inflammation that contributes to poor outcomes after resuscitation from sudden cardiac arrest. Mitochondrial DNA (mtDNA) has been implicated as a proinflammatory stimulus in other contexts, but its role in postcardiac arrest syndrome is unclear. We determined if postcardiac arrest syndrome is characterized by a rise in circulating mtDNA, how mtDNA activates immune cells, and if targeting mtDNA‐sensing pathways attenuates leukocyte activation.

A Missed Diagnosis? A Virtual Simulation on Managing Fatigue and Cardiometabolic Risk in Primary Care

A Missed Diagnosis? Join our interactive virtual simulation to refine your approach to fatigue and cardiometabolic risk in primary care. Discover practical strategies to detect subtle patient risks and optimize care.

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How would you manage these patients who continue to experience daytime fatigue, despite instituting sleep hygiene measures?

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