A new study suggests that men require nearly double the amount of exercise as women to lower heart disease risk an equivalent ...
Of the 285 heart transplant recipients, 72% were men. After transplantation, women had better outcomes at both 1 year (92.2% ...
More than half of heart attacks in women 65 and under stem from hidden causes, a new study finds. While heart attacks are often thought to be caused by artery-clogging plaque, new research has found ...
It turns out, there’s a link between your hydration and heart rate variability. Here’s a look at the science. The post ...
“Physiologically, circulating estrogen levels are much higher in females than in males, and estrogen can promote body fat ...
"Dying from a broken heart" is a phrase we all have heard to describe the emotional pain of heartbreak. The idea has been revisited in songs, film, and books throughout history, or we may have even ...
A class of drugs called beta-blockers — used for decades as a first-line treatment after a heart attack— doesn’t benefit the vast majority of patients and may contribute to a higher risk of ...
This news might break your heart — literally. A shocking new study found that the go-to treatment doctors have been using to manage heart attacks for the last 40 years may offer no real benefit for ...
Round-the-clock fetal monitoring leads to unnecessary C-sections. But it’s used in nearly every birth because of business and ...
Men are more likely to die from "broken heart syndrome" than women are, according to a new study published. Takotsubo Cardiomyopathy, also known as broken heart syndrome, is brought on by physical or ...