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Here s a look at business news from around the Mahoning Valley

Here s a look at business news from around the Mahoning Valley
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Bidirectional impact of cardiovascular disease, cancer in Blacks focus of new AHA center

Credit: Kim Ratliff, Augusta University Cardiovascular disease and cancer, the nation s top two killers, share common ground like obesity and chronic inflammation, as well as a disproportionate impact on Black Americans. A new American Heart Association-funded center at the Medical College of Georgia is working to better understand the bidirectional dynamic, including how to intervene when, for example, cancer treatment itself results in heart problems. MCG, the state s public medical school, is one of four centers nationally funded by the $11 million AHA Strategically Focused Research Network on disparities in cardio-oncology, which also includes Boston University School of Medicine, the Medical College of Wisconsin and the University of Pennsylvania.

New technology uses genetic testing to help millions find the perfect clinical trial match

New technology uses genetic testing to help millions find the perfect clinical trial match Marsha Lewis, Producer; Roque Correa, Editor; and Kirk Manson, Videographer, Ivanhoe Newswire Published:  Tags:  New technology uses genetic testing to help millions find the perfect clinical trial match CLEVELAND, Ohio (Ivanhoe Newswire) – Right now, there are more than 378,000 clinical trials listed on the website clinicaltrials.gov. Millions of people look through the list each month to see if there is a new treatment, technology or procedure that can help them or their loved one. But how do you know which one is the right one for you? New technology is using genetic testing to make the perfect match.

SPRINT study confirms controlled blood pressure important in preventing heart disease and stroke

 E-Mail CLEVELAND - Follow-up data from the landmark SPRINT study of the effect of high blood pressure on cardiovascular disease have confirmed that aggressive blood pressure management lowering systolic blood pressure to less than 120 mm Hg dramatically reduces the risk of heart disease, stroke, and death from these diseases, as well as death from all causes, compared to lowering systolic blood pressure to less than 140 mm Hg. Systolic blood pressure (SBP) is the upper number in the blood pressure measurement, 140/90, for example. In findings published in the May 20, 2021 issue of the New England Journal of Medicine, investigators presented new evidence of the effectiveness of reducing SBP to a target range of less than 120 mm Hg.

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