Case Western Reserve University: Medicine's Marissa Scavuzzo discusses study on why women experience more severe gut pain
Live Science: Marissa Scavuzzo, assistant professor at the School of Medicine, discussed a study that helps explain why women’s gut pain can worsen as hormones change, validating patients’ experiences ...
Medicine's Marissa Scavuzzo discusses study on why women experience more severe gut pain
Dallas Morning News: Gut microbe may help ease sickle cell pain, UT Dallas study finds
Scientists at the University of Texas at Dallas say microbes in the gut could be a key to reducing pain from sickle cell disease. In a study published last month in Cell Host & Microbe, the UT Dallas ...
Gut microbe may help ease sickle cell pain, UT Dallas study finds
PsyPost on MSN: Scientists reveal the biological pathways linking childhood trauma to chronic gut pain
Scientists reveal the biological pathways linking childhood trauma to chronic gut pain
A new study has found that a prebiotic fiber supplement reduced pain, improved grip strength, and lowered pain sensitivity in people with knee osteoarthritis (OA)—with far fewer dropouts than a ...
The New England Journal of Medicine: Case 36-2024: A 16-Year-Old Girl with Abdominal Pain
Smithsonian Magazine: Women Are More Likely to Have Irritable Bowel Syndrome. This Newfound Gut Pain Pathway Might Explain Why
Women Are More Likely to Have Irritable Bowel Syndrome. This Newfound Gut Pain Pathway Might Explain Why
Medscape: Estrogen Could Be a Key Driver of Gut Pain in Women
Women have higher rates of irritable bowel syndrome (IBS) than men, and IBS comes with high rates of gut pain and other symptoms. New research may explain why. Scientists at the University of ...