Treatments : Shots - Health NewsHere you can find out how the practice of medicine is changing. We pull together the latest research on medical tests, drugs and other therapies.
A study finds that psilocybin can desynchronize networks in the brain, potentially enhancing its plasticity.
Sara Moser/Washington University School of Medicine in St. Louis
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Sara Moser/Washington University School of Medicine in St. Louis
A T-shirt from fashion brand Namilia shown during Berlin Fashion on July 3, 2024 sparked an outcry on the brand's Instagram, with readers noting that Ozempic is in short supply for people with a medical need for it.
Sebastian Reuter/Getty Images
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Dr. Marty Sellers, wearing a red scrub cap, and his team from Tennessee Donor Services perform a normothermic regional perfusion organ recovery at a hospital in eastern Tennessee.
Jessica Tezak for NPR
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Lab experiments show that some ants will treat the injured legs of comrades, and when it's necessary will even perform medical amputations.
Bart Zijlstra, UNIL
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This illustration shows how the thin film of sensors could be applied to the brain before surgery.
Courtesy of the Integrated Electronics and Biointerfaces Laboratory
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Courtesy of the Integrated Electronics and Biointerfaces Laboratory
A dose of MDMA. The drug has been studied as a treatment for PTSD and FDA is now considering whether to approve it.
Travis Dove/for The Washington Post via Getty Images
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Travis Dove/for The Washington Post via Getty Images
Sheryl J. Moore has been advocating for the past decade to update the rules about gay men donating tissue since she lost her eldest son, Alexander “AJ” Betts Jr., to suicide in 2013 and his corneas went to waste.
KC McGinnis for KFF Health News
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Research on MDMA has shown it can be effective for PTSD, but approval of the treatment isn't yet guaranteed.
The Washington Post via Getty Images
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Dr. Jeffrey Stern, assistant professor in the Department of Surgery at NYU Grossman School of Medicine, and Dr. Robert Montgomery, director of the NYU Langone Transplant Institute, prepare the gene-edited pig kidney with thymus for transplantation.
Joe Carrotta for NYU Langone Health
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Winston Hall, 9, needs growth hormone to manage symptoms of Prader-Willi syndrome, a genetic condition. A shortage of the medicine has contributed to behavioral issues that led him to be sent home from school.
Bridget Bennett for NPR
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After using the Lenire device for an hour each day for 12 weeks, Victoria Banks says her tinnitus is "barely noticeable."
David Petrelli/Victoria Banks
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Surgeon Christoph Haller and his research team from Toronto's Hospital for Sick Children are working on technology that could someday result in an artificial womb to help extremely premature babies.
Chloe Ellingson for NPR
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Denise Lee on her last day of chemo. In addition to chemo and surgery, she was treated with immunotherapy. She's currently in remission.
Denise Lee
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Surgeons perform the first transplant of a genetically modified pig kidney into a living human at Massachusetts General Hospital in Boston.
Michelle Rose/Massachusetts General Hospital
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A case of bronchitis in 2014 left Sanna Stella, a therapist who lives in the Chicago area, with debilitating fatigue.
Stacey Wescott/Tribune News Service via Getty Images
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Stacey Wescott/Tribune News Service via Getty Images
An experimental gene therapy tested in young children with an inherited form of deafness restored some hearing for most of them.
VICTOR HABBICK VISIONS/Getty Images/Science Photo Library
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VICTOR HABBICK VISIONS/Getty Images/Science Photo Library
Newer blood tests can help doctors diagnose Alzheimer's disease without a brain scan or spinal tap. But some tests are more accurate than others.
Tek Image/Science Photo Library/Getty Images
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For patients with long COVID, exercise can lead to a worsening of symptoms, a condition called post-exertional malaise. New research shows what's going on in their muscles.
Erik Isakson/Getty Images/Tetra images RF
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