Genetic testing for hereditary arrhythmia and cardiomyopathy in an area with known founder effects on local genetic variants ...
Watching TV for an hour or less each day may help offset the risk for heart attack and stroke in people genetically ...
Limiting TV watching to no more than one hour a day appears to help offset the increased risk of heart disease associated ...
Research in Newfoundland led to a treatment that keeps Chad Pelley's heart from stopping, but the genetic variant he carries ...
Despite insufficient evidence to support direct-to-consumer genetic testing in routine clinical care, cardiovascular clinicians increasingly face questions about its utility and interpretation because ...
A new review highlights how gut microbiome imbalances contribute to cardiovascular disease by altering short-chain fatty ...
Research published in the Journal of the American Heart Association says people at risk of diabetes can lower their chances ...
Limiting daily television viewing to one hour or less may help reduce the risk of heart attack, stroke, and other cardiovascular diseases, even in individuals with a high genetic predisposition to ...
A sedentary lifestyle such as watching TV (two or more hours daily) may be a key factor in the risk of developing heart and blood vessel diseases, according to an analysis of health records from a ...
Watching no more than one hour of TV a day may lower the risk of heart attack, stroke and other blood vessel diseases among people with varying levels of genetic risk for Type 2 diabetes, including ...