(Press-News.org) About The Study: Per the results of this cohort study, very high lipoprotein(a) levels correlated with increased 30-year risk of cardiovascular disease among healthy women. Screening for elevated lipoprotein(a) in the general population may be warranted.
Corresponding Author: To contact the corresponding author, Ask Tybjærg Nordestgaard, MD, PhD, email anordestgaard@mgh.harvard.edu.
To access the embargoed study: Visit our For The Media website at this link https://media.jamanetwork.com/
(doi:10.1001/jamacardio.2025.5043)
Editor’s Note: Please see the article for additional information, including other authors, author contributions and affiliations, conflicts of interest and financial disclosures, and funding and support.
# # #
Embed this link to provide your readers free access to the full-text article This link will be live at the embargo time https://jamanetwork.com/journals/jamacardiology/fullarticle/10.1001/jamacardio.2025.5043?guestAccessKey=1dd5633f-472c-4d70-a878-8a74ea255136&utm_source=for_the_media&utm_medium=referral&utm_campaign=ftm_links&utm_content=tfl&utm_term=010726
END
Thirty-year risk of cardiovascular disease among healthy women according to clinical thresholds of lipoprotein(a)
JAMA Cardiology
2026-01-07
ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:
Yoga for opioid withdrawal and autonomic regulation
2026-01-07
About The Study: In this randomized clinical trial, yoga significantly accelerated opioid withdrawal recovery and improved autonomic regulation, anxiety, sleep, and pain. These findings support integrating yoga into withdrawal protocols as a neurobiologically informed intervention addressing core regulatory processes beyond symptom management.
Corresponding Author: To contact the corresponding author, Hemant Bhargav, MD, PhD, email drbhargav.nimhans@gmail.com.
To access the embargoed study: Visit our For The Media website at this link https://media.jamanetwork.com/
(10.1001/jamapsychiatry.2025.3863)
Editor’s ...
Gene therapy ‘switch’ may offer non-addictive pain relief
2026-01-07
Philadelphia—A preclinical study uncovered a new gene therapy that targets pain centers in the brain while eliminating the risk of addiction from narcotics treatments, a breakthrough which could provide hope for the more than 50 million Americans living with chronic pain.
Dealing with chronic pain can feel like listening to a radio where the volume is stuck at maximum volume, and no matter what you do, the noise never seems to dull or lessen. Opioid medications, like morphine, work by turning down the volume, but ...
Study shows your genes determine how fast your DNA mutates with age
2026-01-07
An analysis of genetic data from over 900,000 people shows that certain stretches of DNA, made up of short sequences repeated over and over, become longer and more unstable as we age. The study found that common genetic variants can speed up or slow down this process by up to fourfold, and that certain expanded sequences are linked to serious diseases including kidney failure and liver disease.
Why it matters
More than 60 inherited disorders are caused by expanded DNA repeats: repetitive genetic sequences ...
Common brain parasite can infect your immune cells. Here's why that's probably OK
2026-01-07
The parasite that may already live in your brain can infect the very immune cells trying to destroy it, but new UVA Health research reveals how our bodies keep it under control.
The parasite, Toxoplasma gondii, is potentially deadly. It infects warm-blooded animals, but it’s typically passed to people by cats or by consuming contaminated produce or undercooked meat. Once it’s made its way inside you, the parasite spreads throughout your body and takes up permanent residence in your brain. It’s estimated about a third of all people around the world have the parasite, yet, amazingly, few ever have symptoms. ...
International experts connect infections and aging through cellular senescence
2026-01-07
“Here we propose the concept of infection-driven senescence (IDS) to describe the phenomenon in which microbial agents, beyond viruses, can trigger cellular senescence in host cells.”
BUFFALO, NY — January 7, 2026 — A new meeting report was published in Volume 17, Issue 12 of Aging-US on December 23, 2025, titled “Cellular senescence meets infection: highlights from the 10th annual International Cell Senescence Association (ICSA) conference, Rome 2025.”
Led by Stefanie Deinhardt-Emmer ...
An AI–DFT integrated framework accelerates materials discovery and design
2026-01-07
Researchers from China University of Petroleum (East China), in collaboration with international partners, have reported a comprehensive review of artificial intelligence (AI) techniques integrated with density functional theory (DFT) to accelerate materials discovery, property prediction, and rational design. The work outlines how AI–DFT coupling improves computational efficiency and enables a shift from traditional trial-and-error approaches toward intelligent, data-driven materials innovation.
Materials ...
Twist to reshape, shift to transform: Bilayer structure enables multifunctional imaging
2026-01-07
Driven by the global wave of informatization, the real-time transmission, efficient processing, and intelligent analysis of massive data have become both the core engine propelling frontier technologies like artificial intelligence, autonomous driving, and augmented reality, and a critical bottleneck currently faced. As the most intuitive and information-rich carrier in communication, the processing efficiency of images directly determines the "comprehensibility" and ultimate "decision-making value" of visual information. However, traditional electronic computing architectures are gradually approaching their physical limits, encountering severe ...
CUNY Graduate Center and its academic partners awarded more than $1M by Google.org to advance statewide AI education through the Empire AI consortium
2026-01-07
NEW YORK, January 7, 2026 — The City University of New York Graduate Center (CUNY Graduate Center) has received a grant totaling more than $1 million from Google.org to support the work of Empire AI, a statewide consortium of 11 public and private academic institutions focused on advancing the effective integration of artificial intelligence into higher education. The award—which is the second such source of funding that the CUNY Graduate Center has received from Google.org to support AI literacy in higher education—will further the reach of a comprehensive, multi-institution assessment of how best to prepare ...
Mount Sinai Health system receives $8.5 million NIH grant renewal to advance research on long-term outcomes in children with congenital heart disease
2026-01-07
NEW YORK, NY (January 7, 2026) – The National Institutes of Health has awarded the Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai an $8.5 million renewal grant to continue groundbreaking work aimed at understanding and improving long-term outcomes for children with congenital heart disease—the most common type of birth defect in the United States.
The project, led by Brett Anderson, MD, MBA, MS, Director of the Center for Child Health Services Research in The Mindich Child Health and Development Institute at the Icahn School of Medicine, expands upon the earlier work of Dr. Anderson and her team, who created the first statewide data network ...
Researchers develop treatment for advanced prostate cancer that could eliminate severe side effects
2026-01-07
CLEVELAND—Researchers at Case Western Reserve University have developed a treatment for advanced prostate cancer that could eliminate a side effect so debilitating that patients often refuse the life-saving therapy.
In a study recently published in Molecular Imaging and Biology, the researchers describe how the breakthrough treatment targets prostate cancer cells as effectively as current therapies, but with dramatically reduced damage to salivary glands. The result: This treatment eliminates the severe ...
LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:
Groundbreaking PKU innovation can detect disease from a drop of blood
Differences in brain activity between ADHD and neurotypical adults
How do people quickly respond to scary sounds?
Coastal ocean chemistry now substantially shaped by humans
Brain computer interface enables rapid communication for two people with paralysis
Computational model measures key aging metric from routine biopsies
Geographic, racial, and sex disparities in time to treatment for early-onset colorectal cancer
Long-term trends in pediatric self-injury in high-income countries
Experimental therapy shows safety and signals of clinical benefit in ALS
Holding vs continuing GLP-1/GIP agonists before upper endoscopy
Clinical trial results support use of weekly extended-release buprenorphine for treatment of opioid use disorder during pregnancy
AI expert and industry-leading toxicologist Thomas Hartung hails launch of agentic AI platform, ToxIndex, as a “transformative moment” in chemical safety science
New genetic risk score better predicts diabetes, obesity and downstream complications
Novel high-entropy strategy boosts energy storage and enables ultrafast discharge in advanced ceramics
From trial-and-error to intelligent design: Machine Learning boosts a breakthrough in the performance of BaTiO3-based High-Entropy energy-storage ceramics
Traditional Chinese medicine in febrile neutropenia treatment: advances and prospects
Novel tantalate high-entropy ceramics coatings achieve breakthrough thermal barrier performance at 1500 °C
JMIR Publications welcomes Dr. Sara Simblett as Editor in Chief of JMIR Neurotechnology
SwRI to characterize new inspection methods for Air Force aircraft
AI gets a D: Study shows inaccuracies, inconsistency in ChatGPT answers
FAU researchers find concerning rise in US teen obesity over a decade
New study offers insight into tissue-specific gene regulation of sheep
Researchers find low response rate by clinicians to elevated levels of Lp(a)
Jeonbuk National University researchers develop clustering-based framework for water level forecasting
Reduced air pollution from climate mitigation could boost crop yields and lower hunger risk
Scientists reveal a new class of molten planet
Plastic bottles transformed into Parkinson’s drug using bacteria
New alliance clinical trial aims to improve outcomes in brain tumors
Intensive therapy approaches benefit infants and toddlers with cerebral palsy
National Poll: 1 in 3 parents fear their teen or young adult could cause a crash
[Press-News.org] Thirty-year risk of cardiovascular disease among healthy women according to clinical thresholds of lipoprotein(a)JAMA Cardiology