Researchers are urging the public to be cautious of misleading supplements that contain Amanita muscaria instead of the expected psilocybin.
The crisis of toxic shock syndrome in the early 1980s changed our understanding of certain bacteria as well as how women should use tampons while menstruating.
The latest social media health trend asks people to force their mouths shut while sleeping so they can breathe through their nose. But does it actually work?
Mexico and WHO health officials have reported the first known human case and death tied to H5N2 avian influenza. No further cases have been detected yet.
Researchers in the UK have found evidence of a specific genetic pathway that can cause immune cells to turn on the body and attack the guts of those with IBD.
Researchers are warning doctors and the public about two emerging fungi that are stranger and hardier than the typical ringworm infection.
New research Monday suggests that the combination of alcohol and long-haul flying can lower blood oxygen and raise our heart rate while sleeping.
Striking in color and size as they may be, however, Joro spiders aren’t a danger to humans.
New research shows that the NES/T gel can effectively suppress men’s fertility in as little as four weeks.
A small proof-of-concept study has found evidence that semaglutide can improve people's taste sensitivity, particularly to sweetness.
Despite years of some law enforcement agencies saying so, there is no strong evidence that simply touching or being near fentanyl can be deadly.
Known for killing people within a day of symptoms starting, the true origins of the "sweats" that plagued the 1500s remain unknown to this day.
New research finds that Canada's heftier and cold-resistant wild pigs have a "high potential" to move into the northern prairies of Canada and the U.S.
Evidence from a 4,000-year-old skull suggests ancient Egyptian doctors were handy enough to try surgically removing tumors from their patients.
In a report this month, CDC scientists detail how the family caught a rare outbreak of bear-related trichinellosis that sent several to the hospital.
New research is the latest to link the use of Ozempic, Wegovy, and other GLP-1 drugs to a greater risk of gastroparesis. Here's what we know so far.
Doctors in Portugal describe how the cat likely transmitted a germ that usually only causes swollen lymph nodes and fever.
It's unclear whether the presence of plastic could explain a global decline in sperm counts.
New research found a link between higher fluoride exposure in pregnant women and a greater risk of neurobehavioral problems in their children at age 3.
Microbiologists in the UK have just created beer using yeast sourced from the guts of killer bees.
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