Aging well in a digital world
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Updates every hour. Last Updated: 29-May-2026 15:16 ET (29-May-2026 19:16 GMT/UTC)
A groundbreaking long-term MRI study demonstrates that lower accumulation of abdominal fat (visceral fat), measured throughout the entire follow-up period, is associated with a significant slowing of brain atrophy, preservation of key brain structures, and better cognitive performance in late midlife – independent of weight loss. The findings suggest that the relationship between abdominal fat and brain aging is likely mediated primarily through glucose control and insulin sensitivity. The study is the first to link repeated MRI-based measurements of cumulative visceral fat with long-term trajectories of brain aging and cognition.
New research from the UC Davis School of Medicine and collaborating institutions solves the mystery of how mutations in the same gene can cause serious heart disease or severe skin disease — but never both. The findings were published in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences (PNAS).
Weill Cornell Medicine investigators have “reverse engineered” ketamine’s antidepressant effects to identify potential new strategies for treating depression.
While there are many effective treatments available for depression, not all patients respond to them. About one-third of patients must try multiple medications before eventually finding relief, and another third have treatment-resistant depression. An anesthetic called ketamine can provide immediate relief to some patients with treatment-resistant depression, but the effects are often short-lived. Ketamine also has serious side effects for some patients, including changes in heart rate or blood pressure, feelings of being disconnected from one’s thoughts or self and addiction.