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Study Reveals Morning Coffee Reduces Heart Disease Risk
Morning coffee may lower risk of heart disease-related death, research suggests
The time of day you drink a cup of coffee may lower the risk of an early death, new research suggests. The study found that people who drank coffee in the morning had a lower risk of dying from cardiovascular disease and had a lower mortality risk than all-day coffee consumers - but the research could not prove whether coffee was the sole cause.
Drinking coffee in the morning could reduce your risk of death and heart disease, study finds
The findings of a new study indicate it is not only about how much coffee you drink, but when you drink it, that is important.
Want to reduce risk of stroke, heart disease, infection? Socialize
A study found specific plasma proteins that increase with loneliness and isolation and can lead to strokes, heart attacks and other health problems.
One drink could slash your risk of heart disease death but only if you drink it at a certain time
A study, which followed more than 40,000 adults over a span of more than 10 years, discovered that people who drank it at this time were 31 per cent less likely to die from the condition
Limit coffee-drinking to this time window to lower early death risk, study suggests
Limiting coffee intake to the morning, it turns out, may be best — and that seems to be regardless of the amount consumed and other potentially influential factors, according to a study published Tuesday in the European Heart Journal.
Why drinking coffee in the morning may lower risk of death
A new study on the health benefits of coffee has found that people who drink coffee before noon are 31 percent less likely to die from cardiovascular disease. NBC News medical contributor Dr. John Torres joins TODAY to break down what you need to know.
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Diabetes and Heart Disease Rise Alongside Sugary Drink Consumption
A new study assesses the effects of sugar-laden beverages on global health, with higher rates of consumption found in Latin ...
News Medical on MSN
1d
New study links millions of diabetes and heart disease cases globally to sugary drinks
Study published in Nature Medicine on January 6 estimates that 2.2 million new cases of type 2 diabetes and 1.2 million new ...
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Sugary drinks may be driving millions of diabetes and heart disease cases
Sugar-sweetened beverages were responsible for an estimated 9.8% of new type 2 diabetes cases and 3.1% of cardiovascular ...
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Sugary drinks tied to millions of diabetes, heart disease cases, study says
Sugar-sweetened beverage consumption accounts for about 2.2 million new cases of type 2 diabetes and 1.2 million new cases of ...
News Medical on MSN
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Are individuals with advanced breast cancer more likely to have cardiovascular disease?
Research shows that patients with advanced breast cancer have higher odds of cardiovascular disease, emphasizing the ...
Premium Times
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Sugary drinks linked to global rise in diabetes, heart disease
One in five new type 2 diabetes cases in Sub-Saharan Africa and a quarter of those in Latin America and the Caribbean are ...
HealthDay on MSN
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The Heart Disease, Breast Cancer Link
Heart disease and cancer might seem completely unrelated, but these two top causes of death sometimes act in concert.Wo ...
Medscape
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Lupus Ups Atherosclerosis Risk, But Disease Remission Helps
Controlling cardiovascular risk factors and maintaining long-term disease remission mitigated the increased risk for ...
Hosted on MSN
13h
Innovation driving expansion in cardiovascular devices market
Analysis by GlobalData has identified that innovative cardiovascular devices are driving diversification in the growing ...
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