Scientists are testing an entirely new way to fight heart disease: whether gene editing might offer a one-time fix for high ...
South Asian adults in the U. S. were more likely to have risk factors for atherosclerotic cardiovascular disease (ASCVD) by age 45 when compared to white, Black, Chinese or Hispanic adults in the same ...
South Asian adults in the U.S. are more likely to have risk factors for atherosclerotic cardiovascular disease (ASCVD) by age ...
Low-carb and low-fat diets can both protect your heart — but only if they’re built on healthy, high-quality foods.
South Asian adults begin developing risk factors for heart disease earlier—by their mid-40s—according to an analysis of data from two long-running health studies in the United States.
Haupt is a health and wellness editor at TIME. Haupt is a health and wellness editor at TIME. More than 99% of people who suffer a heart attack, stroke, or heart failure have at least one risk factor ...
Taking care of your heart health can get challenging. Leading cardiologists share the real, practical ways that they make it ...
A spike in cardiac events in Super Bowl team cities could be linked to supercharged emotions during and after the game, ...
It’s important for everyone, regardless of sex, to be proactive about their heart health. For women, this means knowing how ...
Two UT Health San Antonio researchers lead an American Heart Association scientific statement aimed at early recognition and intervention for post-stroke spasticity, painful muscle stiffness and ...
New research indicates that men develop cardiovascular disease seven years earlier than women, suggesting that men may ...
Men develop a greater risk of cardiovascular disease years earlier than women — starting at around age 35, according to a new ...