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CandaceRobbAuthor,
@CandaceRobbAuthor@historians.social avatar

A fascinating article about medieval wetlands, healing, and royal control by Claudia Moreira Calzadilla and Nina Witteman.
@medievodons
https://niche-canada.org/2024/05/22/healing-and-ruling-in-medieval-englands-wetlands/

CandaceRobbAuthor,
@CandaceRobbAuthor@historians.social avatar
ClaireFromClare,
@ClaireFromClare@h-net.social avatar

@CandaceRobbAuthor Mention of reminds me of this 🧵 on the drainage of in the , & the documentation & maps by William Dugdale:
https://fediscience.org/@NikaShilobod/109684771833343180

@medievodons

brianvastag,
@brianvastag@sciencemastodon.com avatar

Informative interview with Svetlana Blitshteyn, a pioneering MD in treating (autonomic dysfunction), which has exploded with by @erictopol

https://erictopol.substack.com/p/svetlana-blitshteyn-on-the-front

mattotcha,
@mattotcha@mastodon.social avatar
mattotcha,
@mattotcha@mastodon.social avatar
mattotcha,
@mattotcha@mastodon.social avatar
tio,

Ok so this photo is insane and represents the advancement in the medical field. It is one of those photos that you could show to people from the past and they will be shocked...

Face transplant....

#medicine #surgery #future

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ScienceDesk,
@ScienceDesk@flipboard.social avatar

Scientists have identified a genetic form of Alzheimer’s disease in older people, pinpointing a gene of which some people carry two copies. The gene, called APOE4, is not only a risk factor but an underlying cause for the disease when found twice in a person’s DNA, researchers say. Finding a way to target APOE4 in treatment is crucial because Leqembi, the only drug found to slow the disease, causes dangerous side effects in people with the gene. The Associated Press has more.

https://flip.it/vmFuUY

hawaiianeye797,
@hawaiianeye797@mastodon.online avatar
ai6yr,

BBC: Wounded orangutan seen using plant as medicine https://www.bbc.com/news/science-environment-68942123 #medicine #animals

Geojoek,
@Geojoek@mastodon.hams.social avatar

@ai6yr

Awesome! And one would think think BBC would do a 1 minute search to avoid that headline: animals self-medicating Is something that’s been observed for millennia. Heck, I remember reading about it in a biology textbook in the 1990s / it’s been long postulated that that is where humans learned plant medicine from a million years ago.

Anyway:

https://www.science.org/doi/10.1126/science.1235824

https://blog.nature.org/2016/06/20/self-medication-wildlife-style-how-birds-creatures-medicinal-plants/

junesim63, (edited )
@junesim63@mstdn.social avatar

Some good news this morning. A new personalised neoantigen vaccine against melanoma is starting its final phase 3 trial at University College Hospital, London. The mRNA vaccine is custom-built for each patient and tells their body to hunt down cancer cells to prevent the disease ever coming back.

‘Real hope’ for cancer cure as personal mRNA vaccine for melanoma trialled | Cancer | The Guardian
https://www.theguardian.com/society/2024/apr/26/cancer-mrna-vaccine-melanoma-trial?CMP=firstedition_email

ByrdNick,
@ByrdNick@nerdculture.de avatar

Will physicians better categorize X-ray and ECG images if given more time per image?

Medical residents and staff viewed 50-100 images for 175 milliseconds to 20 seconds.

Neither viewing time nor experience seemed to be strong predictors of true positive and false positive categorizations.

Authors admit, "All viewing times in both studies were likely too brief to represent clinical practice."

https://doi.org/10.1111/medu.15380

#decisionScience #medicine #vision #epistemology #expertise #risk #stats

ByrdNick,
@ByrdNick@nerdculture.de avatar

Hi, @ttpphd. I’m guessing that admission/realization was the result of peer review (after completing the study).

ttpphd,
@ttpphd@mastodon.social avatar

@ByrdNick ah ok fair enough. I've been there too

mattotcha,
@mattotcha@mastodon.social avatar
tokensane,
@tokensane@mastodon.me.uk avatar
mfm_IDdoc,
@mfm_IDdoc@med-mastodon.com avatar

In the most recent weekly update on April 11, 2024, the CDC reported 8 new cases of measles, bringing the total for this year to 121 measles cases reported by 18 jurisdictions. 56% of cases have been hospitalized for isolation or management of complications.

https://www.cdc.gov/measles/cases-outbreaks.html

bicmay,
@bicmay@med-mastodon.com avatar

“This is one of those studies at ACC that I think is potentially practice changing,” said Kim Eagle, director of the Frankel Cardiovascular Center at the University of Michigan who wasn’t involved in the trial. It’s “a very important landmark study that will change the way patients who are currently managed with [heart attacks] are cared for.”

https://www.statnews.com/2024/04/07/beta-blockers-heart-attack-trial/

cbarbermd,
@cbarbermd@med-mastodon.com avatar

Q: If you walk into a room where someone with has been previously, how long can infectious virus 🦠 still be present?

A: Potentially, nearly 5 hours!

These researchers found that genetically identical infected a patient who was admitted 4 hrs, 45 min post D/C of an asympto infected pt. Have to wonder if it’d be even longer if they’d been symptomatic…
https://tinyurl.com/ybcyuv6v

nixCraft,
@nixCraft@mastodon.social avatar

I have taken expired insulin by accident for several days. It is a miracle that I am not seriously sick or dead. 😵 How is this even possible?

bargoderea,
@bargoderea@mastodon.social avatar

@nixCraft you really don't know why? it is very rare to find a medicine that does harm after the expiry date, most of them either stop working at all or is a lie, the 2nd option is not something to rely on 100%

OwenTyme,
@OwenTyme@mastodon.social avatar

@nixCraft I'm reminded of something I read about happening in a pharmacy that had been running for quite a few years.

They found a box of a mixture of various medicines that hadn't been touched for forty years. They were about to throw them out, when someone bright who knew about such things grabbed them and sent them off to test their potency (for science!).

Almost everything was still good.

Expiration dates are testing-based and they just don't test a drug for forty years before release.

davemark,
@davemark@mastodon.social avatar

"The evidence is clear: A liquid-only diet before a colonoscopy is unnecessary"

Written by the director of clinical research at the Celiac Disease Center at Columbia University. Not just some person with an opinion.

The all liquid diet is punishing. Good read.

https://www.statnews.com/2024/03/19/colonoscopy-preparation-liquid-only-diet-data-gastroenterologists/

sanguish,
@sanguish@iosdev.space avatar

@davemark I was only asked to not eat for the last 12 hours, so that wasn’t a big deal. But the prep stuff is just 🤢

For $100 for a tiny bottle and two plastic cups they could spend some time making it taste better.

I was told to mix it with a drink mix I like, so I used Country Time Lemonade. Can’t drink that anymore. 🤬

davemark,
@davemark@mastodon.social avatar

@sanguish 😂

leapingwoman,
@leapingwoman@spore.social avatar
brianvastag,
@brianvastag@sciencemastodon.com avatar

Very large study produces more evidence that infection with increases risk of psychiatric diagnosis, by about 50% in the first year.

https://www.nature.com/articles/s41562-024-01853-4

globalmuseum,
@globalmuseum@mastodon.online avatar

An extendable 1566 medicine chest, up to a metre long, with 126 bottles & pots for drugs ~ some with their original contents ~ including rhubarb powder, anti-worms ointment, juniper water & mustard oil.

Made for Genoese governor of Aegean island of Chios.

Collection: Wellcome Trust

petersuber, (edited )
@petersuber@fediscience.org avatar

Kudos to @bmj_latest () for strengthening its policy and adding an policy.
https://www.bmj.com/content/384/bmj.q324.full


@openscience

rladies_bergen,
@rladies_bergen@hachyderm.io avatar
cbarbermd,
@cbarbermd@med-mastodon.com avatar

Insurance companies use prior authorizations to delay or deny patients care.

Denials =money💰💰in the bank 🏦 for these cos.

⭐️Prior auths cost the US $35 billion in admin costs.
⭐️Last year United made $22B in profit, Cigna posted $5B…

https://www.nytimes.com/2024/03/14/opinion/health-insurance-prior-authorization.html

CindyWeinstein,
@CindyWeinstein@zirk.us avatar

@cbarbermd. prior. pre-existing. dangerous temporal words when deployed by insurance companies.

petersuber,
@petersuber@fediscience.org avatar

New study: "The practice of automatically assigning senior members of departments as co-authors on all submitted manuscripts may be common in the health sciences…Those admitting to this practice find[] it unjustified in most cases."
https://www.nature.com/articles/s41598-024-55966-x

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