A major study of over 24,000 patients suggests that starting heart surgery in the late morning is linked to an 18% increase in cardiovascular mortality compared to early-morning operations.
Most Recent Articles
Reducing MACE and Renal Progression via Modern Pharmacotherapy in Albuminuric CKD
The updated 2025 VA/DoD clinical practice guideline provides primary care clinicians with twenty-three evidence-based recommendations for diagnosing and treating chronic kidney disease to reduce cardiovascular risk and renal...
Utilizing Waist-to-Height Ratio to Overcome BMI Limitations in Older Populations
New research suggests that waist-to-height ratio provides a more accurate assessment of visceral fat and obesity-related health risks than BMI in aging populations.
Diagnostic Accuracy of Integrated Sensing and Communication in Lung Disorder Classification
A new wireless screening system uses 6G radio signals and AI to accurately detect five common lung diseases without physical contact or invasive imaging.
The Role of UNC-62 and ELT-2 in Regulating Circadian-Mediated Immune Heterogeneity
Maternal circadian timing serves as a non-genetic factor that shapes offspring immune defenses and predicts susceptibility to bacterial infections by regulating baseline expression of inflammatory biomarkers.
