There is currently no easy way to treat high Lp(a). A single shot could change that.
Search Results
You searched for: first name
From Ramses II to Alexander the Great, these leaders helped shaped the world we know today.
To what extent will our psychological vulnerabilities shape our interactions with emerging technologies?
Queen Calafia seems like she could have sprung from the pages of a modern fantasy novel.
The clash of academic archaeology and what might be called folk archaeology comes into stark focus at Stonehenge.
Unless you confront your theory with what’s actually out there in the Universe, you’re playing in the sandbox, not engaging in science.
Until recently, video games were accused of killing brain cells. Now, researchers are trying to understand how they help players get smarter.
Until the Apollo missions, we had no idea how the moon got here, just a series of educated guesses. They rewrote the story of the moon’s origins.
In 1054, a core-collapse supernova occurred 6500 light-years away. In 2023, JWST imaged the remnant, and might solve a massive mystery.
Alchemy had its golden age in the 17th century, when it counted Isaac Newton and Robert Boyle among its adherents.
The Pan-American Highway began a century ago with a vision of unfettered motor-vehicle access between Alaska and Tierra del Fuego. What happened to the dream?
The Apple Watch could soon take the pain out of monitoring blood sugar levels.
Prolonged and repetitive tasks rewire us in profound ways – which can be a force for good at work.
Humans seemingly have opposing desires to fit in and to be unique. The interplay between these might drive the evolution of fads.
Scientists may have detected the somewhat smelly chemical dimethyl sulfide on a planet 120 light-years from Earth.
Without Étienne-Joseph-Théophile Thoré, the genius of the Dutch painter Johannes Vermeer would have been lost to time.
There might be a hard limit to our knowledge of the Universe.
An interactive “globe of notability” shows the curious correspondences and the strange landscape of global fame.
The deep-thinking oddballs of West Coast cycle racing valued mid-ride marijuana over sports science.
How drugs, demons, and the search for immortality gave us words we use everyday.
Looking back on our planet’s early history offers a new (and less crazy) meaning for the idea of a “flat Earth.”
“For every PhD there is an equal and opposite PhD.”
Are anti-workers the lazy children of privilege or the brave vanguard of a utopic upheaval?
Anyone can have a bad day at work, but not everyone scores this high on narcissism, psychopathy and Machiavellianism.
The intensely white coloration of the shrimp is a remarkable feat of bioengineering.
It could explain why so many people don’t respond to common antidepressants.
In the early 1900s, some Americans feared that teddy bears would not instill maternal instincts in girls, thereby causing “race suicide.”
It may be time for a cosmological paradigm shift.
The strange case of cultured ultra-thief Stéphane Breitwieser — who claims “art is my drug” — has divided opinion. Is it Stendhal syndrome?