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News & Articles By Ava Grace
09/05/2025
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By Ava Grace
Your plate, your fate: Mediterranean diet defies genetic destiny in Alzheimer’s prevention
A new study demonstrates that adhering to a Mediterranean diet can significantly reduce the risk of Alzheimer’s disease, even for individuals carrying the high-risk APOE4 gene variant, which was previously considered a powerful predictor of the disease. The long-term study found that for people with two copies of the APOE4 gene, strict adherence to the […]
09/04/2025
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By Ava Grace
Groundbreaking study reveals the brain’s critical role in salt-induced hypertension
A new study reveals that a high-salt diet directly causes brain inflammation, which is a key driver of high blood pressure (hypertension). This challenges the long-held belief that hypertension is caused solely by the kidneys’ response to salt. This brain inflammation activates immune cells (microglia), triggering a hormonal cascade that elevates blood pressure. The inflammation […]
09/03/2025
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By Ava Grace
Nanny state or necessary shield? U.K. government moves to ban energy drinks for children
The U.K. government is proposing a nationwide ban on the sale of high-caffeine energy drinks (over 150mg/liter) to under-16s in England, citing serious health and behavioral concerns. The policy is a direct response to high consumption rates among children and aims to combat issues like obesity, sleep disorders and significant classroom disruption reported by teachers. […]
08/31/2025
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By Ava Grace
Radio wave brain stimulation temporarily enhances human sense of smell, study finds
Researchers in South Korea have developed a novel, non-invasive treatment that uses targeted 2.45-gigahertz radio waves, directed through the forehead, to temporarily stimulate the olfactory nerves and bulb in the brain. In a study on healthy individuals, a single five-minute session of this “electroceutical” therapy significantly improved participants’ ability to detect faint odors, with the […]
08/24/2025
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By Ava Grace
Minnesota joins legal onslaught against TikTok, alleging algorithmic exploitation of youth
The Minnesota lawsuit accuses TikTok of violating state consumer protection laws through deceptive trade practices, deliberately framing the case around consumer fraud rather than free speech arguments. The core allegation is that TikTok’s algorithm is a psychologically manipulative tool designed to addict young users by analyzing their behavior to create a compulsive, endless stream of […]
08/21/2025
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By Ava Grace
Men with dementia die sooner than women, study finds
Men with dementia die faster than women—27.2 percent of men died within a year of diagnosis compared to 21.8 percent of women. This gap persists even after accounting for age, health conditions and socioeconomic factors. Men require more intensive medical care, including 50.5 percent higher hospitalization rates, greater reliance on hospice and emergency services and […]
08/21/2025
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By Ava Grace
Artificial sweetener aspartame linked to increased stroke risk, study finds
A 2025 study in Scientific Reports found that aspartame — used in Diet Coke, sugar-free gum and medications — increases stroke risk by damaging blood vessel function, triggering inflammation and weakening the blood-brain barrier. Aspartame disrupts genes regulating blood pressure and inflammation, worsening stroke severity. Even low-dose, long-term consumption (e.g., daily diet soda) may gradually harm […]
08/18/2025
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By Ava Grace
Just 5 minutes a day: How a quick walk can sharpen your brain as you age
Just five minutes of moderate-to-vigorous activity (e.g., brisk walking) can improve memory, focus and processing speed in older adults, per a study in Age and Aging. With dementia cases projected to hit 78 million globally by 2030, this research highlights exercise as a simple, modifiable way to delay cognitive decline — even for busy or […]
08/17/2025
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By Ava Grace
The silent cancer fighter: How exercise rewrites survival odds
Physical fitness not only prevents cancer but also improves survival rates for diagnosed patients. A meta-analysis of 47,000 patients found that higher fitness levels reduced mortality risk by 31-46 percent, with even small improvements lowering risk by 11-18 percent. Exercise boosts immunity (activating tumor-targeting natural killer cells), reduces inflammation (lowering cancer-fueling cytokines and insulin-like growth […]
08/17/2025
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By Ava Grace
Skipping vegetables could harm mental health: Study finds strong link between diet and psychological wellbeing
Australians eating less than one serving of vegetables daily face 1.6 times higher odds of psychological distress (depression, anxiety, stress) compared to those consuming five or more servings. Women benefit most, with mental health improvements continuing up to five servings, while men peak at three to four. Women see ongoing mental health benefits with higher […]
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