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Medical Bulletin 04/June/2026 - Video
Overview
Here are the top medical news for today:
Exercise and Adequate Sleep Linked to Better Midlife Mental Health: Study
A brisk walk, a bike ride, or a workout that leaves you slightly breathless may do more for mental health than simply moving more.
A new study published in Depression and Anxiety suggests that the intensity of physical activity plays a crucial role in reducing symptoms of depression and anxiety. Researchers found that while replacing sedentary time with light activities such as casual walking offered some benefits, moderate-to-vigorous exercise produced significantly stronger improvements in mental wellbeing.
The findings indicate that not all movement affects mental health equally. Activities that raise the heart rate and cause mild breathlessness appear to provide the greatest psychological benefits. According to the researchers, the results highlight the importance of exercise intensity rather than simply reducing sitting time.
The study also emphasized that mental health is shaped by the balance of activities across the entire 24-hour day. Physical activity, sleep, and sedentary behaviour are closely connected, meaning changes in one area inevitably affect the others.
Researchers examined what happened when participants replaced 30 minutes of daily sedentary time with moderate-to-vigorous physical activity. The results were notable: depressive symptoms were about 9% lower, while anxiety symptoms decreased by around 5%. These improvements were observed without requiring dramatic lifestyle overhauls.
Importantly, sleep emerged as another key factor. Participants slept an average of seven and a half hours per night, and even modest reductions in sleep duration—between five and 30 minutes less per night—were associated with slightly higher levels of depression and anxiety symptoms. This suggests that increasing exercise should not come at the expense of adequate rest.
The findings suggest that supporting mental health may not require major changes. Instead, a simple daily adjustment—such as replacing 30 minutes of sitting with more vigorous activity while maintaining healthy sleep habits—could make a meaningful difference.
Together, sufficient sleep and regular moderate-to-vigorous exercise may offer a powerful combination for improving mental wellbeing during middle age.
REFERENCE: Tan, Clarence, Niemelä, Maisa, Seppänen, Marjo, Leinonen, Anna-Maiju, Farrahi, Vahid, Compositional Associations of 24-h Movement Behaviors With Depressive and Anxiety Symptoms in Middle-Aged Adults, Depression and Anxiety, 2026, 6881070, 13 pages, 2026. https://doi.org/10.1155/da/6881070
Study Finds One Fat Linked to Tumor Growth, Another Halves Disease Burden
Not all fats are created equal, especially when it comes to cancer.
A new study published in Cancer Discovery suggests that the type of fat people consume may play a crucial role in pancreatic cancer development. Researchers found that some dietary fats appear to fuel tumor growth, while others may help slow the disease by making cancer cells more vulnerable to destruction.
The research focused on pancreatic ductal adenocarcinoma (PDAC), the most common and deadliest form of pancreatic cancer. Scientists at Yale School of Medicine designed 12 different high-fat diets for mice, keeping calorie content the same while changing the source of fat. This allowed them to isolate the effects of specific fatty acids on cancer progression.
One of the study's most surprising findings involved oleic acid, a monounsaturated fat commonly found in olive oil, peanuts, and certain vegetable oils. Mice predisposed to pancreatic cancer developed tumors more rapidly when fed diets rich in oleic acid. The result was unexpected because oleic acid is widely regarded as beneficial for heart health.
In contrast, diets rich in polyunsaturated fatty acids (PUFAs), particularly omega-3 fatty acids found in fish oil, significantly slowed cancer development. Researchers reported that mice fed fish oil-enriched diets experienced about a 50% reduction in disease burden compared with those consuming standard fat diets.
Further investigation revealed a possible explanation. Cancer cells can be eliminated through a process called ferroptosis, a form of cell death triggered by lipid oxidation. Polyunsaturated fats are more susceptible to oxidation, making cancer cells easier to destroy. Monounsaturated fats, however, protect cells from oxidation, helping tumors survive and grow.
Although the findings are based on animal studies and have not yet been confirmed in humans, they suggest that fat quality may be more important than total fat intake when it comes to pancreatic cancer risk.
REFERENCE: Christian Felipe. Ruiz, Xiangyu Ge, Rylee McDonnell, Sherry S. Agabiti, Daniel C. McQuaid, Andy Tang, Meera Kharwa, Jennifer Goodell, Rocio del M. Saavedra-Pena, Allison Wing, Guangtao Li, Natasha Pinto. Medici, Marie E. Robert, Rohan R. Varshney, Michael C. Rudolph, Fred S. Gorelick, John Wysolmerski, Daniel Canals, John D. Haley, Matthew S. Rodeheffer, Mandar Deepak. Muzumdar. Diet-induced phospholipid remodeling dictates ferroptosis sensitivity and tumorigenesis in the pancreas. Cancer Discovery, 2026; DOI: 10.1158/2159-8290.CD-25-0734
Chronic Kidney Disease Spreading Faster Than Expected, Global Analysis Shows
Nearly 800 million people worldwide are now living with chronic kidney disease (CKD), making it one of the fastest-growing health threats of the 21st century. Often called a “silent disease,” CKD can progress for years without noticeable symptoms, quietly damaging the kidneys until serious complications develop.
A major 2025 global analysis published in The Lancet found that the number of people with CKD has more than doubled over the past three decades, rising from 378 million in 1990 to 788 million in 2023. Researchers estimate that about 14 per cent of adults globally now have some degree of kidney disease. The condition was linked to approximately 1.5 million deaths in 2023 and has entered the world's top 10 causes of death for the first time.
The kidneys play a crucial role in filtering waste, excess fluid, and toxins from the blood. When kidney function declines, harmful substances accumulate in the body, increasing the risk of heart disease, stroke, and kidney failure. In advanced stages, patients may require dialysis or a kidney transplant to survive.
Researchers found that high blood sugar, high blood pressure, and obesity remain the leading drivers of CKD worldwide. Alarmingly, impaired kidney function was also associated with nearly 12 per cent of global cardiovascular deaths, highlighting the disease's impact far beyond the kidneys.
One of the biggest challenges is that most people remain undiagnosed until significant damage has already occurred. Experts say simple urine and blood tests can detect kidney disease early, when treatment and lifestyle changes are most effective.
Recent advances in medications have offered new hope. Newer therapies can slow kidney damage and reduce the risk of heart attacks, strokes, and heart failure. However, access to testing and treatment remains limited in many low- and middle-income countries.
Researchers warn that without stronger screening programs and better access to care, CKD deaths could continue to rise in the coming decades. The findings underscore the urgent need to treat chronic kidney disease as a major global public health priority rather than a hidden complication of other illnesses.
REFERENCE: Patrick B Mark, Lauryn K Stafford, Morgan E Grams, et al.; Global, regional, and national burden of chronic kidney disease in adults, 1990–2023, and its attributable risk factors: a systematic analysis for the Global Burden of Disease Study 2023. The Lancet, 2025; 406 (10518): 2461 DOI: 10.1016/S0140-6736(25)01853-7


