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Scientists boosted one protein and aging mice became stronger and healthier
Scientists have identified a protein that appears to put the brakes on the chronic inflammation linked to aging. Older mice with boosted levels of the protein were stronger, more energetic, and had healthier bones than untreated mice. Researchers say the findings could eventually lead to therapies that help people stay healthier and more independent later in life.
People who lost the most weight on Ozempic saw huge health benefits
People who lost significant weight while taking Ozempic, Wegovy, Mounjaro, or Saxenda had sharply lower risks of major obesity-related health problems, including sleep apnea and kidney disease. Those who gained weight instead faced higher risks — especially for heart failure — even though many patients discontinued the medications within a year.
Measurement of the coupling coordination level and influencing factors of community healthcare services and older adults care services in China
CONCLUSION: Based on the findings, this study recommends implementing dynamic regulatory strategies aligned with different development stages, formulating region-specific policies that account for spatial heterogeneity, and adopting targeted interventions focusing on key influencing factors, in order to systematically promote the high-quality coordinated development of healthcare services and older adults care services in China.
Dose-response association between daily step count and health-related outcomes in older adults: a nationwide cross-sectional study in Thailand
CONCLUSIONS: Higher daily step counts are independently associated with better quality of life, knee-specific function, and physical performance among community-dwelling Thai older adults. A target of 6,000-9,000 steps per day appears clinically meaningful and pragmatically attainable. Daily step count may serve as a practical and scalable metric to guide healthy aging strategies in Asian populations.
The cognitive cost of age-related hearing loss
CONCLUSION: In this sample of older adults, worse hearing thresholds were associated with poorer performance on cognitive screening instruments and with lower hearing-related quality of life. These findings support further investigation of early hearing assessment and rehabilitation in older adults, and indicate the necessity of effective and timely auditory amplification, even in individuals with moderate hearing loss.
Perspectives of older adults with pre-frailty and frailty when engaging with an online nutrition educational resource: a qualitative study
CONCLUSIONS: Older adults with pre-frailty and frailty value online nutrition education but require resources that are personalised, credible, and accessible across diverse learning needs. Findings highlight opportunities to embed consumer voices in resource design and provide future directions for refining the current online nutrition resource. This research contributes to evidence on consumer-informed digital nutrition education to support autonomy, dietary self-management, and healthy ageing.
Scientists found a smarter Mediterranean diet that slashes diabetes risk by 31%
A large European study revealed that a lower-calorie Mediterranean diet paired with exercise and coaching dramatically reduced the risk of type 2 diabetes. Participants who made these lifestyle changes were 31% less likely to develop the disease over six years. They also lost more weight and trimmed their waistlines compared to those following a standard Mediterranean diet alone.
A unifying model of stem cell dynamics explains age-related methylation patterns across mammals
‘It is incredible’: How AI is transforming mathematics
DNA-folding changes block production of self-directed antibodies
The uncritical adoption of AI in science is alarming — we urgently need guard rails
Airborne DNA can yield insights with the right techniques
France’s research-primate project goes against its own ethics panel
Support academic institutions under attack
AI might jeopardize the uncertainty required in science
China moves AI brain implants from trials towards real-world use
Hidden sugar patterns on human cells could reveal cancer early
Scientists have uncovered a hidden “sugar code” on the surface of human cells that could transform how diseases are detected. Using an advanced imaging technique called Glycan Atlasing, researchers at the Max Planck Institute mapped the tiny sugar structures coating cells and discovered that these patterns shift depending on what the cell is doing. Immune cells changed their sugar layouts when activated, and cancerous tissues displayed distinct surface signatures compared to healthy tissue.
Eating grapes daily could unlock powerful skin protection
Scientists discovered that eating grapes can actually change how your skin behaves at the genetic level. After just two weeks of daily grape consumption, volunteers showed signs of improved skin protection and reduced oxidative stress from UV exposure. Researchers say the effects appear widespread, even though every person’s genes responded a little differently.
Predicting categorical and continuous Alzheimer's disease outcomes from a single MRI scan
Deep learning (DL) has shown success in predicting Alzheimer's disease (AD) diagnosis, yet continuous measures such as cognitive assessment remain critical for richer prognosis, trajectory tracking and clinical trial enrichment. Current neurocognitive batteries are time-consuming, and the few DL models predicting cognition require expensive multimodal neuroimaging and longitudinal data. Although magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) is the most clinically accessible modality, on its own it struggles...
Spatial proteomic analysis in human Alzheimer's disease brains enables identification of microenvironment-dependent microglial cell states
Disease-associated microglial states are thought to contribute to Alzheimer's disease (AD) progression, but characterizing them and their relationships to pathology remains challenging. Here we introduce CODEX-CNS-a multiplexed protein imaging technology with a custom data analysis pipeline for use in human brain samples. We profiled 704,706 cells in samples from the frontal cortex of 8 people with AD and 8 healthy controls and mapped features including blood-brain barrier, meningeal components...