What Causes Bad Breath and How to Fix It Effectively

Medical News Bulletin - Daily Medical News, Health News, Clinical Trials And Clinical Research, Medical Technology, Fitness And Nutrition News–In One Place

Bad breath is not always about something you have eaten recently. Most of the time, it points to something going on with your oral health.  You might be popping mints or brushing more often and still getting no results. This is because these things only cover the smell for a short time. They do not […]

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How to Manage Dental Emergencies Before Seeing a Dentist

Medical News Bulletin - Daily Medical News, Health News, Clinical Trials And Clinical Research, Medical Technology, Fitness And Nutrition News–In One Place

Dental emergencies can happen at any time. Severe dental pain, broken tooth, cracked or knocked-out tooth, or severe bleeding do not give you a chance to go to a doctor or get an appointment from a Brampton Dentist. They need your immediate attention. Various remedies are used to provide calmness and relief for different dental […]

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FDA authorizes fruit-flavored vapes for first time

The FDA for the first time authorized the marketing of non-tobacco and non-menthol electronic nicotine delivery system products for adults, the agency announced.
The four vapes authorized via the FDA’s premarket tobacco product application pathway — which come in gold, sapphire, classic menthol and fresh menthol flavors — contain 50 mg/mL, or 5%, of tobacco-derived nicotine, according to an FDA press release.
“By helping to prevent youth use, device access restrictions are a potential game changer,” Bret Koplow, PhD, JD, acting director of the FDA’s Center for Tobacco Products, said in the

Early intervention an unmet need in diabetic macular edema

DENVER — Experts agreed that there is a significant unmet need for early intervention in diabetic macular edema, according to a presentation at the Association for Research in Vision and Ophthalmology meeting.
“We know that DME is a leading cause of vision loss in working-age adults, but many patients are left untreated,” Baruch D. Kuppermann, MD, PhD, told Healio. “This is somewhat surprising, but at 1 year after diagnosis of DME, 60% of patients are left untreated.”
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Kuppermann and colleagues designed the DME AWARE Delphi study to better understand and build consensus around the

AI tools could restore ‘joy of practice,’ lower physician burnout

CHICAGO — The AI tools that benefit clinicians most are not always the glamourous ones contributing to drugs, robotics and therapeutics innovations, but could also be the mundane ones that help ease physician burnout.
That is according to David Ting, MD, keynote speaker at Digestive Disease Week.
Ting, chief clinical product lead at Microsoft and primary care internist and pediatrician at Massachusetts General Hospital, told attendees he envisions a 2036 where AI products assist with the ordinary: workflow redesign, administrative burden and workplace collaboration.
AI also might one day take

Antibiotic resistance genes found in newborns’ stool

MUNICH — Antibiotic resistance genes were found in the stool of newborns within days of birth, according to a study presented at ESCMID Global.
Researchers at Aristotle University of Thessaloniki in Greece collected 105 meconium samples from infants who were admitted to the neonatal ICU within 24 hours of birth between July 2024 and July 2025 and extracted DNA samples from the stool to identify antibiotic resistance genes (ARGs).
“This is the largest study of its kind exploring the effect of hospital environment on the collection of ARGs in the neonatal gut,” lead author Argyro Ftergioti, MD,

Treating cancer based on mutation alone does not improve survival

Treatments based on genomic profiling can significantly extend survival for patients with advanced or rare cancer, but only if those therapies have been validated within their histologic type.
An evaluation of more than 3,000 adults in Australia showed those who received regulatory-approved targeted therapies or ones that have demonstrated clinical activity within a patient’s specific cancer had a 40% improvement in survival compared with individuals who did not receive those treatments.
However, individuals who received genomic treatments based only on data from a different malignancy derived

Optometrist malpractice payments ‘extremely rare’

Optometrists had some of the lowest rates of malpractice payouts of all health professions, including after states allowed them to perform certain injections and laser surgeries, according to a study.
“Optometry’s scope of practice has expanded substantially over the past several decades, including increased authority to prescribe oral medications, administer injections and perform in-office laser procedures,” study author Robert S. Duszak, OD, FAAO, of Wilmington Veterans Affairs Medical Center, Delaware, told Healio. “Despite these changes, there has been limited

A candid look at antifungal treatment durations

Current Infectious Disease Society of America guidelines for the treatment of invasive candidiasis recommend a minimum duration of 14 days after documented clearance of Candida species from the bloodstream.
This recommendation has remained the standard of therapy since first applied to the methodology of a randomized controlled trial over 3 decades ago. This recommendation is not without consequence; approximately 1 in 6 patients receiving treatment for invasive candidiasis have hospital admissions prolonged solely for completion of IV antimicrobial therapy, potentially placing patients at