Air pollution associated with increased migraine activity Increased short-term and cumulative exposure to air pollution, particularly NO2 and PM2.5, is associated with higher rates of acute migraine episodes and increased use of migraine medications. Climate factors such as high temperatures and low humidity amplify these associations. The findings are based on hospital, clinic, and pharmacy data, primarily reflecting individuals with more severe migraine. Causality cannot be established.
Air pollution is associated with increased migraine activity. • The study does not prove that air pollution causes migraine attacks; it only shows an association. • Both short-term and cumulative exposure to air pollution were tied to increased migraine activity. • Heat and humidity were also associated with increased activity. • These findings could help predict when attacks may be more likely. People could stay indoors, use air filters and take preventive medications to help ward off attacks.
People will get maximum benefits of exercise only if exercise timing is aligned with individual chronotype in adults
Timing exercise to match body clock chronotype—the natural predisposition to morning or evening alertness—may lower cardiovascular disease risk among those who are already vulnerable, suggests research published in the open access journal Open Heart. Aligning exercise timing with individual chronotype in adults at cardiovascular risk led to greater improvements in blood pressure, metabolic markers, autonomic function, aerobic capacity, and sleep quality compared to mismatched timing. The effect was most pronounced in systolic blood pressure and sleep quality, especially among those with hypertension and morning chronotypes. Chronotype alignment boosted sleep quality and lowered risk factors, such as high blood pressure, fasting glucose, and "bad" cholesterol, more effectively than mismatched exercise timing, the trial results indicate.
The findings prompt the researchers to suggest that individual chronotype assessment should be included in exercise prescriptions for those who are at risk of cardiovascular disease.
Exercise lowers the risks of heart disease/stroke and diabetes, and whether someone is naturally a morning lark or a night owl—an innate disposition that affects sleep-wake patterns, hormone secretion, and energy availability across the day—influences exercise performance and adherence, explain the researchers. Analysis of the experimental results showed that cardiovascular disease risk factors, aerobic fitness, and sleep quality improved in both groups after 12 weeks.
But matching exercise with chronotype produced larger improvements in blood pressure, autonomic function (involuntary bodily processes, including heart rate), aerobic capacity, metabolic markers, and sleep quality than mismatched exercise.
These improvements were especially noticeable in sleep quality—an increase of 3.4 compared with 1.2 points—and systolic blood pressure—the higher of the two numbers in a reading.
This fell by 10.8 mm Hg in those whose exercise sessions had been matched to their chronotype compared with a drop of 5.5 mm Hg among those whose exercise sessions had been mismatched.
The fall in systolic blood pressure was even larger among those who had high blood pressure to begin with: their systolic blood pressure fell by an average of 13.6 mm Hg compared with 7.1 mm Hg in those whose exercise sessions had been mismatched.
Although improvements were observed across both chronotypes, overall, the effects were larger among morning larks than among night owls.
Chronotype-aligned exercise timing in middle-aged adults at cardiometabolic risk: a randomised controlled trial, Open Heart (2026). DOI: 10.1136/openhrt-2025-003573
High-salt diet linked to faster memory decline in men
Higher sodium intake is associated with faster episodic memory decline in men, but not in women, over a 72-month period. The findings suggest high-salt diets may negatively impact cognitive function, potentially through mechanisms involving brain inflammation, vascular damage, and reduced cerebral blood flow.
Francisca Chuwa et al, Higher sodium intake is associated with episodic memory decline in cognitively unimpaired older males: A 6-year longitudinal study, Neurobiology of Aging (2026). DOI: 10.1016/j.neurobiolaging.2026.02.003
Dr. Krishna Kumari Challa
Air pollution associated with increased migraine activity
Increased short-term and cumulative exposure to air pollution, particularly NO2 and PM2.5, is associated with higher rates of acute migraine episodes and increased use of migraine medications. Climate factors such as high temperatures and low humidity amplify these associations. The findings are based on hospital, clinic, and pharmacy data, primarily reflecting individuals with more severe migraine. Causality cannot be established.
Air pollution is associated with increased migraine activity.
• The study does not prove that air pollution causes migraine attacks; it only shows an association.
• Both short-term and cumulative exposure to air pollution were tied to increased migraine activity.
• Heat and humidity were also associated with increased activity.
• These findings could help predict when attacks may be more likely. People could stay indoors, use air filters and take preventive medications to help ward off attacks.
https://www.aan.com/PressRoom/Home/PressRelease/5333
7 hours ago
Dr. Krishna Kumari Challa
People will get maximum benefits of exercise only if exercise timing is aligned with individual chronotype in adults
Timing exercise to match body clock chronotype—the natural predisposition to morning or evening alertness—may lower cardiovascular disease risk among those who are already vulnerable, suggests research published in the open access journal Open Heart.
Aligning exercise timing with individual chronotype in adults at cardiovascular risk led to greater improvements in blood pressure, metabolic markers, autonomic function, aerobic capacity, and sleep quality compared to mismatched timing. The effect was most pronounced in systolic blood pressure and sleep quality, especially among those with hypertension and morning chronotypes.
Chronotype alignment boosted sleep quality and lowered risk factors, such as high blood pressure, fasting glucose, and "bad" cholesterol, more effectively than mismatched exercise timing, the trial results indicate.
The findings prompt the researchers to suggest that individual chronotype assessment should be included in exercise prescriptions for those who are at risk of cardiovascular disease.
Exercise lowers the risks of heart disease/stroke and diabetes, and whether someone is naturally a morning lark or a night owl—an innate disposition that affects sleep-wake patterns, hormone secretion, and energy availability across the day—influences exercise performance and adherence, explain the researchers.
Analysis of the experimental results showed that cardiovascular disease risk factors, aerobic fitness, and sleep quality improved in both groups after 12 weeks.
But matching exercise with chronotype produced larger improvements in blood pressure, autonomic function (involuntary bodily processes, including heart rate), aerobic capacity, metabolic markers, and sleep quality than mismatched exercise.
These improvements were especially noticeable in sleep quality—an increase of 3.4 compared with 1.2 points—and systolic blood pressure—the higher of the two numbers in a reading.
This fell by 10.8 mm Hg in those whose exercise sessions had been matched to their chronotype compared with a drop of 5.5 mm Hg among those whose exercise sessions had been mismatched.
The fall in systolic blood pressure was even larger among those who had high blood pressure to begin with: their systolic blood pressure fell by an average of 13.6 mm Hg compared with 7.1 mm Hg in those whose exercise sessions had been mismatched.
Although improvements were observed across both chronotypes, overall, the effects were larger among morning larks than among night owls.
Chronotype-aligned exercise timing in middle-aged adults at cardiometabolic risk: a randomised controlled trial, Open Heart (2026). DOI: 10.1136/openhrt-2025-003573
7 hours ago
Dr. Krishna Kumari Challa
High-salt diet linked to faster memory decline in men
Higher sodium intake is associated with faster episodic memory decline in men, but not in women, over a 72-month period. The findings suggest high-salt diets may negatively impact cognitive function, potentially through mechanisms involving brain inflammation, vascular damage, and reduced cerebral blood flow.
Francisca Chuwa et al, Higher sodium intake is associated with episodic memory decline in cognitively unimpaired older males: A 6-year longitudinal study, Neurobiology of Aging (2026). DOI: 10.1016/j.neurobiolaging.2026.02.003
7 hours ago