Behavior
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- Noninvasive brain stimulation may improve swallowing after stroke
- Mini-stroke doubles risk of heart attack
- Gaps in U.S. health care limit options for older adults, expert says
- Traffic accidents linked to increased risk of chronic widespread pain
- Online messaging delivers follow-up care for depression
- Managing post-stroke depression improves physical functioning
- Stroke incidence higher among patients with certain type of retinal vascular disease
- Collaborative care shown to be successful for patients with opioid addictions
- Depression, age, other factors linked to dependence after stroke
- Drug stops progression of Parkinson"s disease in mice; Medication turns on critical gene, protects brain cells
- Stroke patients benefit from family involvement in exercise therapy
- New cell therapy a promising atherosclerosis treatment
- Who can drive after a stroke? Tests can help decide
- Increasing triglyceride levels linked to greater stroke risk; Study finds higher cholesterol levels only increase risk of stroke in men
- Stroke takes "enormous toll" on Hollywood stars
- Stroke rehabilitation: Walking improves with home therapy just as well as treadmill training, study suggests
- System-approach to stroke care increases the use of tPA therapy by 13.5-fold
- Younger stroke victims benefit from earlier MRIs, ambulance rides to ER
- Most stroke patients not getting clot-busting treatment in timely manner
- Women caring for ex-husbands
- New online tool predicts probability of death from stroke
- Experimental agent better than aspirin at preventing stroke, study suggests
- MRI can help decide therapy in patients with unclear-onset stroke
- U.S. study: Young, uninsured or Medicare Part D survivors often can"t afford medicines
- Robot therapy can improve arm, shoulder mobility after stroke
- Poorer patients have more severe ischemic strokes, study indicates
- Stroke in Mexican-Americans expected to rise 350 percent in next 40 years
- Drug may improve outcomes in mild stroke patients, save $200 million annually
- Delayed-enhancement MRI may predict, prevent strokes, study shows
- Maternal stroke history tied to women"s heart attack risk
- Behavior