From the diaphragm to the pelvic floor, scientists say improving your core strength can protect your spine and help you move ...
A paralyzed man finds freedom in wheelchair rugby. He collaborates with a Marquette lab to research improved breathing for ...
Take a look at an adorable clip of a little pup getting annoyed by their own hiccups and then find out what hiccups really ...
As evenings draw in, tension sticks, screens glow, and sleep stalls. You need a reset that fits frantic nights today. Autumn ...
A gastroenterologist explains why old-school remedies work—and what to try. Recent research also highlights new techniques to ...
If it makes you feel any better, you’re one of many: Constipation is the most common gastrointestinal complaint, leading to 2 ...
Our bodies move in various directions to perform tasks such as picking up a child, carrying luggage, or getting up and down ...
Grey skies, rush-hour emails, and a cold that won’t commit. Then a curious ritual: five minutes of deliberate laughter, every day. Sounds daft until the ...
Dosing has begun in a long-term extension study testing Satellos Bioscience’s experimental oral therapy SAT-3247 in men with ...
Scientists replace costly membranes with durable diaphragms that turn waste carbon into energy-rich compounds.
Researchers at the University of California San Diego have discovered that the gut's rhythmic muscle movements could help explain how blood vessels in the brain expand and contract together.
Every cell in the body has the same DNA, but different cell types—such as muscle or brain cells—use different parts of it.