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Type 2 diabetes: How exercising in the afternoon can provide benefits

Researchers say people with type 2 diabetes who exercise in the afternoon seem to have better results in controlling blood glucose levels. They aren't sure why, but it may be linked to better sleep patterns and healthier eating habits.

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Jingyi-qian
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Type 2 diabetes: How exercising in the afternoon can provide benefits

Researchers say people with type 2 diabetes who exercise in the afternoon seem to have better results in controlling blood glucose levels. They aren't sure why, but it may be linked to better sleep patterns and healthier eating habits.

Pennsylvania
United-states
Boston
Massachusetts
Mitchell-lazar
Jingyi-qian
University-of-penn-health-system
Action-for-health
Harvard-joslin-diabetes-center
Harvard-medical-school-massachusett-brigham
Diabetes-care
Harvard-medical-school

Piles of ancient poop reveal "extinction event" in human gut bacteria | Science

Coprolites from near the Turkey Pen site in Utah reveal ancient diets. RUSS BISHOP/ALAMY STOCK PHOTO Piles of ancient poop reveal ‘extinction event’ in human gut bacteria May. 12, 2021 , 11:00 AM Every meal you eat is digested with the help of the bountiful bacteria thronging your intestines. When you're done digesting, those bacteria are also part of what's excreted. Now, 1000-year-old piles of dried-out poop are offering insights into how the billions-strong bacterial ecosystems in the human gut have been altered by sanitation, processed foods, and antibiotics. In a study published today in  Nature, researchers analyzed ancient DNA from coprolites, or preserved feces, found at the back of rock shelters in Utah and Mexico. The data give scientists their first good look at ancient gut bacterial communities, says Stanford University biologist Justin Sonnenburg. “These paleofeces are the equivalent of a time machine.”

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