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  • Longevity icon Bryan Johnson’s methods may be a bust. Is there a secret to living longer?

    Longevity experts are mostly over Bryan Johnson’s shtick and hope people consider the basics when it comes to taking care of themselves. “Biological age,” they add, isn’t currently as useful a measure as many companies might persuade you into thinking. The things that we know that work today include sticking to an exercise routine, keeping…

  • New Treatment for Atopic Dermatitis: Expert Insights, Key Facts

    Atopic dermatitis (AD) is the most common form of eczema. It causes itchy, inflamed skin that can show up anywhere on the body, though it likes to settle in skin folds like the elbows and behind the knees. AD is a long-term condition that comes and goes, and it can affect people of all ages.…

  • Tuberculosis is one of the deadliest infectious diseases in human history. Here’s why.

    When most of us think of serious diseases that kill millions of people, the ones that come to mind are often the ones that get the most attention: cancer, COVID-19, heart disease and diabetes. But a disease that’s been killing a shocking number of people for over a century is tuberculous. Each year, tuberculosis kills…

  • Shingles vaccine may protect against dementia, new study suggests

    Getting vaccinated against shingles — a painful and debilitating condition that can flare up years after infection from varicella zoster — not only lowers the risk of infection, but may also offer some protection against dementia, a provocative new study suggests. The new research, published Wednesday in Nature, analyzed data from more than 280,000 older…

  • Northwestern Medicine Lake Forest Hospital uses dual chamber pacemaker implant to aid patient

    Jerry Karzen has had many successes as both a tennis player and a coach. Now he is getting the chance to extend those accomplishments with the assistance of a new generation of pacemaker. January, Karzen was one of the first patients to receive a new dual chamber leadless pacemaker now offered at Northwestern Medicine Lake…

  • Northwestern Medicine hopes to improve treatment for AFib using an Apple Watch

    Researchers at Northwestern Medicine plan to give Apple Watches to thousands of people as part of a health study. The study is geared toward patients with atrial fibrillation, or AFib, the most common type of heart arrhythmia. The condition is characterized by fast and regular heartbeats from the atria, or the two upper chambers, of…