ARTICLES LIST

 

Total Results: 16203

Media ID Source Name Media Type Language Media Name Media Description Keywords Keywords Link to Article
2632 National Institutes of Health Html en Sweet Stuff - How Sugars and Sweeteners Affect Your Health Most of us love sweet foods and drinks. But after that short burst of sweetness, you may worry about how sweets affect your waistline and your overall health. Is sugar really bad for us? How about artificial or low-calorie sweeteners? What have scientists learned about the sweet things that most of us eat and drink every day?
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sweeteners0.950941
no-calorie sweeteners0.445715
food label0.223765
extremely important source0.307873
caloric sweeteners0.431374
artificial sweeteners0.895848
nutrition-rich whole foods0.223206
excess sweeteners0.457694
sugars0.707683
energy drinks0.229228
overall health0.230213
Sweeteners Affect0.502744
fructose sweeteners0.455795
American diet0.219258
sweet things0.328986
sugar0.725756
healthy foods0.218851
Dr. Andrew Bremer0.33377
health effects0.220596
table sugar0.416944
drinks0.247268
blood glucose levels0.352552
raw sugar0.327271
food molecules0.231788
high-fructose corn syrup0.296885
sweet foods0.432125
non-caloric sweeteners0.424219
American adult diet0.315131
Dr. Kristina Rother0.344477
sports drinks0.23111
healthful gut microbes0.304167
harmful effects0.293287
diet drinks0.23221
food molecule0.233618
natural sugars0.388641
added sugar0.382579
health organizations0.218973
gut microbes0.313962
animal studies0.279878
naturally sweet foods0.349751
added sugars0.486616
healthful additions0.225132
short burst0.223897
excess sugar consumption0.418805
healthful benefits0.222482
unprocessed foods0.221713
intensely sweet taste0.298165
Nutrition Facts label0.29598
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2650 National Institutes of Health Html en Bionic Man How can technologies help heal our bodies and prevent disease? This interactive “bionic man” links to simple descriptions and longer articles about 14 promising tools—such as a robotic leg and an artificial kidney—being developed with NIH support.
technologies0.402676
disease0.400774
bionic man0.892891
simple descriptions0.771376
robotic leg0.90303
bodies0.463671
artificial kidney—being0.75179
links0.390744
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2652 National Institutes of Health Html en Protect Your Tendons - Preventing the Pain of Tendinitis You’ve probably heard of such sports injuries as tennis elbow or jumper’s knee. These are just 2 examples of tendinitis, a painful condition caused by overusing and straining the joints in your body.
shoulders0.519749
repeated motion0.604006
exact areas0.59421
tendinitis0.915369
orthopedic surgeon.0.596628
flexible bands0.607397
joints limber0.602369
body0.56311
wrists0.522369
inflammation Heat0.638835
gentle exercises0.589363
medical word0.604316
Mount Sinai Roosevelt0.679844
certain muscles0.620125
steroid injections0.594925
protective response0.600885
short-term condition0.596773
ibuprofen0.520835
tendon0.780693
examples0.519741
swollen tendon0.688665
old age0.588641
bones0.540263
common way0.598478
ankles0.522349
painful condition0.61455
tendons0.797836
new ways0.586732
jumper’s knee0.612624
Dr. Evan Flatow0.719838
repetitive wrist0.601089
tear0.520731
sports injuries0.604486
orthopedist0.535557
MRI scan0.590414
New York0.596257
stress0.533699
Regular physical activity0.665254
NIH-funded researchers0.58944
elbows0.519742
tennis elbow0.613671
job-related injury0.605517
common places0.5923
hand gripping0.598781
primary care doctor0.666944
connect muscle0.606532
sudden injury.0.591634
risk0.556818
splint0.520796
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2657 National Institutes of Health Html en Tick Talk - Block Tick Bites and Lyme Disease When warm weather arrives, you might get the urge to walk barefoot through the grass. But before you stroll through your lawn or head out on a hiking trail, you’ll want to protect yourself and your loved ones from ticks that often lurk in tall grass, thick brush, and wooded areas. Many ticks carry disease, so do what you can to keep ticks from taking a bite out of you.
great outdoors0.381031
tick prevention0.412238
areas0.335348
Block Tick Bites0.528635
best way0.384337
infected deer0.387864
body0.330896
urge0.320533
Disease Control0.408085
Lyme disease—are0.474368
certain symptoms0.384664
high heat0.381304
nerve problems0.385164
Borrelia burgdorferi0.402096
blood meal0.388455
long socks0.380283
antibiotics Prescription medications0.452663
hiking trail0.398056
extreme fatigue0.383384
specific regions0.394421
size0.329456
Adult deer ticks0.621669
upper Midwest0.393032
insect repellant0.380338
United States0.391712
U.S. Centers0.392599
sesame seed0.386486
skin0.343435
fever0.355945
tick-borne diseases0.587473
red rash0.400539
common tick-borne illness0.492336
bacterial infections0.382317
tall grass0.395985
lyme disease0.948196
poppy seeds0.390119
Rocky Mountain0.391087
Lyme disease expert0.558532
southern states0.392026
bull’s-eye.0.390276
ticks0.813329
disease-causing ticks0.534531
long sleeves0.380846
joint pain0.384181
people0.398929
tall vegetation0.381327
clothes0.326758
later stages0.37913
warm weather0.401566
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3655 National Institutes of Health Html en NIH Guidance on use of Media Including Photos, Graphics, Video Clips, and Audio Files on the Web, in Publications, Training Materials or Other Public Resources NIH respects copyright and has put procedures in place that help it to avoid infringing the rights of third parties, and alerts members of the public who may wish to use the material of any limitations on such use. This is to ensure that the public can easily distinguish between materials that are free to use without limitation and those limited to a fair use, the agency has developed guidance for accomplishing both improving openness and ensuring protections.
media work products0.698018
copyright0.648995
following practices0.60651
copyright status0.618047
fair use30.609795
federal agency0.600488
party media products0.703237
following principles0.619088
NIH website0.736631
publishers0.541874
government contracts0.606506
authorize0.530928
limitations0.55478
extramural grantees0.619247
work products0.813131
images0.546425
Publisher requests0.612972
limited term0.611878
irrevocable right0.609599
free-to-use material0.630615
different situation0.611358
media files0.616316
agency websites0.602248
government employee10.617971
Grantee work products0.713192
materials0.764179
public domain0.736884
science0.525887
parties0.577758
unlimited rights0.716375
limitation0.602452
federal website0.615821
works0.547139
NIH websites0.731981
United States0.624267
limited licenses0.610568
intramural scientists0.734088
openness0.529235
NIH employees0.740133
government-use license0.607258
Federal purposes0.68701
stock photos0.620326
alerts members0.633779
protections0.527817
NIH0.92986
government employees0.604795
material0.687948
unlimited rights20.616758
NIH contractors0.734278
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4316 National Institutes of Health Article es Un golpe en la cabeza: Qué sabemos sobre las conmociones cerebrales El cerebro es el centro de comando del cuerpo. Sus suaves tejidos sensibles flotan en un fluido acolchonado dentro del cráneo, rígido y macizo. Sin embargo, un rápido golpe en la cabeza o un sacudón violento pueden anular estas protecciones y provocar un leve tipo de lesión cerebral conocido como conmoción cerebral.
Frederick Rivara0.665116
Ohio State University0.714586
Beth Ansel0.691663
leve tipo0.700283
aire libre lugares0.681272
Keith Yeates0.691443
suaves tejidos0.674753
neurólogo pediatra0.666997
simple conmoción0.876914
Christopher Giza0.685355
siguientes síntomas0.684751
rápido golpe0.664357
lesiones leves0.910544
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14523 National Institutes of Health Article es Las Personas Paralizadas Recuperan el Movimiento Cuatro jóvenes paralizados por debajo del pecho a causa de lesiones de la espina dorsal recuperaron algo de movimiento después de recibir un tratamiento experimental. Si se confirma en estudios más amplios, este tipo de terapia puede mejorar los resultados para las personas que viven con parálisis.
implante envía señales0.990942
doctora susan harkema0.912055
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14549 National Institutes of Health Article es Detener la hipotermia: El frío puede ser peligroso El aire helado del invierno puede ser estimulante. Pero el aire frío también puede ser riesgoso para su salud, tanto en interiores como al aire libre. Si su temperatura corporal baja demasiado, puede provocar una enfermedad grave y a veces mortal conocida como hipotermia. Aprenda a reconocer los signos de esta enfermedad y tome medidas para mantenerse usted y mantener a su familia seguros durante esta estación fría.
Basil Eldadah0.93205
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14565 National Institutes of Health Article es ¡Escuche! Los ruidos pueden dañar su audición Estamos rodeados de sonidos. Muchos de ellos los disfrutamos, como la música, el canto de los pájaros y las conversaciones con amigos. Pero los ruidos fuertes y de larga duración, como los motores, las herramientas eléctricas e incluso los auriculares, pueden dañar de manera permanente su audición. Tome medidas para proteger sus oídos de ruidos dañinos.
largo plazo0.726685
larga duración0.862867
pequeños mechones0.800417
delicadas células0.869045
vibraciones sonoras0.790664
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16541 National Institutes of Health Html null Manage a Small Business SBIR/STTR Award null
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