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Prosthesis-patient mismatch after TAVR may not negatively impact quality of life

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Researchers warned that “aggressive procedural modifications” should not be necessary during TAVR to mitigate the risk of prosthesis-patient mismatch. This appears to be true for patients receiving both self-expanding and balloon-expandable TAVR valves.

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House Democrats push for last-ditch amendment to protect ACA subsidies for 3 years

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Photo by Matthew Bornhorst via Unsplash

With the U.S. Senate passing a funding agreement to reopen the federal government, the House of Representatives will now have a chance to make changes—though there’s little chance this particular amendment will succeed.

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Patient dies when surgical 'blade' is left inside him, spurring $1M malpractice lawsuit

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The family of Jeffrey Alan Fulcher, 58, sued the Medical University of South Carolina after the father of three died six days after undergoing a minimally invasive procedure to remove part of his esophagus. The state, on behalf of the hospital, settled the case out of court. 

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New data question short-term efficacy of anti-amyloid drug

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Although the drug can slow the progression of cognitive decline, it may have little impact on damage already done by AD prior to treatment.

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MRIs uncover the science behind sports fandom

Sports fans' emotions really are dependent on their team, MRI data suggest

Sports fans may actually be emotionally dependent on their team’s performance on a neural level, according to functional imaging data. 

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SCAI fighting for interventional cardiologists amid challenging payment policies

 SCAI President Srihari S. Naidu, MD, professor of medicine at New York Medical College, explained some of the key payment issues interventional cardiologists are facing amid declining Medicare reimbursements.

SCAI President Srihari Naidu, MD, detailed some of the challenges interventional cardiologists face as reimbursements keep declining. The group has been building new partnerships with other medical societies to strengthen its influence in Washington. 

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‘Unprecedented’: Single dose of new gene-editing therapy lowers cholesterol, triglycerides

A new gene-editing therapy has been tested on humans for the first time, resulting in a significant reduction in their low-density lipoprotein (LDL) cholesterol that could potentially last for decades. The study’s authors presented these early results at the AHA 2023 meeting.

First-in-human data suggest the therapy, CTX310, could be a breakthrough for patients with lipid disorders.

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AI dramatically improves the detection of severe heart attacks

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Researchers put an advanced AI model to the test, using it to evaluate the ECG results of more than 1,000 patients. It performed quite well. 

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CMS’ AI program to add prior authorizations to traditional Medicare; new bill aims to stop it

Medicare money payment

President Donald Trump’s administration argues that their “WISeR” model will eliminate unnecessary testing and save Medicare money. But eight Democrats opposing it think it will only bring Medicare Advantage chaos to Part A and Part B.

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Republicans win shutdown showdown—Senate agrees to funding deal without ACA subsidy extension

Congress Senate Washington D.C. DC

With eight Democrats agreeing to the Republican-backed deal that reverses the firings of federal workers, the Senate now has the 60 votes needed for the bill to advance. The rehirings will include the 1,200 workers fired at the Department of Health and Human Services. 

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