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Home - Medicine - Today’s Public Health Science Briefing | March 19th 2026, 1:00:12 pm

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Today’s Public Health Science Briefing | March 19th 2026, 1:00:12 pm

Last updated: March 19, 2026 12:20 pm
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Key Highlights

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A new study of obstetric patients with severe lung failure (ARDS) found that nearly half (49.2%) of the mothers died, with most deaths occurring in those meeting the strictest “Berlin” definition of the condition. This highlights the extreme danger of severe respiratory failure during and after pregnancy and identifies key risk factors like high blood lactate levels to help doctors predict and manage these critical cases.
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Researchers found that a specific microRNA, miR-23b-3p, acts as a natural brake on an overactive immune response in a type of blood vessel inflammation called IgA vasculitis. Restoring levels of this molecule in lab models calmed the harmful immune reaction, suggesting it could be a target for new treatments for this condition.
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A review article connects early damage to the brain’s wake-promoting systems to the development of Alzheimer’s disease, suggesting that sleep disruption caused by this damage impairs the brain’s nightly cleaning process. This creates a vicious cycle where poor sleep leads to more toxic protein buildup, accelerating neurodegeneration and highlighting sleep health as a potential intervention point.
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For patients with a severe inflammatory disease called Still disease, high levels of a specific immune signal (IL-18) in the blood strongly predict a more difficult, long-term illness and a higher risk of a dangerous complication called macrophage activation syndrome. Checking IL-18 levels, especially 3 months after starting treatment, could help doctors identify which patients need more aggressive therapy early on.
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A new analysis of cancer scans reveals that tumors in different organs (like liver vs. bone) respond very differently to the same drug, shrinking and regrowing at distinct rates. This means where cancer spreads is a major factor in how well treatment works, and future drug trials should account for this “organ-dependent” response to get a true picture of a therapy’s effectiveness.
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