Dr. Sharonne N. Hayes, a Mayo Clinic cardiologist and leading expert in the field of women’s heart health, says progress in research, treatment and prevention has accelerated but women still need ...
No matter what form it takes, regular physical activity—even a brisk walk— can reduce stress. The AHA recommends getting at least 150 minutes per week of moderate aerobic exercise and 75 minutes of ...
Heart failure is a leading cause of hospitalization and long-term disability, with many individuals progressing from subclinical disease to overt symptoms ...
Learn why heart disease is the leading killer of women, how symptoms differ from men, and the unique risk factors to watch for.
Smartphone-based retinal imaging captures postural vascular changes that may serve as early markers for diabetic retinopathy progression.
Diabetic retinopathy develops through complex microvascular damage driven by chronic hyperglycemia, yet traditional risk factors such as disease duration or glycemic control explain only part of ...
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Overweight linked to early brain microvascular damage
A study has found that microvascular abnormalities in the brain can occur even during the pre-obesity overweight stage. While ...
On today’s “Yale New Haven Health Check,” Host Natasha Lubczenko spoke with David Louis, MD, Interventional Cardiology, of Bridgeport Hospital’s Heart & ...
In this series, host Saranya Ravindran speaks with Noel Bairey Merz, a global leader in women’s cardiovascular research, about how microvascular dysfunction shapes heart disease in women. From why ...
Background Coronary microvascular dysfunction (CMD) is associated with a poor prognosis but is difficult to diagnose non-invasively. In a recent paper, ST-segment depression on exercise-ECG was found ...
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