"For the first time," Prasad wrote, "the US FDA will acknowledge that COVID-19 vaccines have killed American children." He ...
The FDA found no ‘certain’ COVID-19 vaccine link to child deaths after reviewing 96 reports through August 2025, clarifying vaccine safety data.
COVID-19 appears to have driven a sharp rise in myocarditis cases during the pandemic, and rates have remained elevated ever ...
Please provide your email address to receive an email when new articles are posted on . Early onset of myocarditis after immune checkpoint inhibitor initiation appeared linked to higher risk for death ...
Stratification by myocardial ECV (≤43% defining low burden) enabled phenotyping of earlier-stage ATTR-CA, which can resemble HHD or mild HCM on conventional imaging. Basal inferolateral/inferior LGE ...
A Penn Medicine–led team has developed a first-of-its-kind artificial intelligence system that interprets cardiac MRI scans with performance approaching expert clinicians. Trained on more than 300,000 ...
Objective To evaluate changes in cardiac magnetic resonance (CMR) tissue characteristics in patients with active cardiac sarcoidosis (CS) confirmed by positron emission tomography (PET)-CT undergoing ...
Doctors may soon be able to tell just how sick a heart failure patient really is by using a routine MRI scan, thanks to new research from the University of East Anglia. People with heart failure often ...
Cardiac magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) is an appropriate non-invasive procedure for functional diagnostics in patients who, as a result of basic diagnostics, are suspected of having chronic coronary ...
Immune checkpoint inhibitors (ICIs) have revolutionized cancer treatment by using a patient’s own T-cells to target tumors. However, they can cause rare but potentially fatal cardiac inflammation ...
Myocarditis has become a flashpoint in debates about COVID vaccines; however, new research suggests this rare heart inflammation is a window into how powerful immune technologies sometimes misfire in ...
One of the most widely known risks linked to the COVID-19 vaccine is myocarditis, especially in young males — and now a new Stanford study has shed some light on why this rare effect can occur.