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Four-inch worm hatches in woman’s forehead, wriggles to her eyelid

27 November 2025 at 07:00

If you need some motivation to keep from eating too much this Thanksgiving, here it is: Doctors in Romania pulled an 11 cm (4.3 inch) living, writhing round worm from a woman’s left eyelid.

According to a report in the New England Journal of Medicine, the worm likely hatched from a hard lump in her right temple, which the woman recalled first spotting a month beforehand. She also noticed that the nodule had vanished just a day before the worm apparently made a squiggly run for her eye.

When she went to an ophthalmologist the next day, doctors immediately noted the β€œmobile lesion” on her eyelid, which was in the suspicious shape of a bunched-up worm just under her skin with a little redness and swelling.

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Radiation May Be Unnecessary for Many Breast Cancer Patients

6 November 2025 at 21:13
Doctors have already begun reducing radiation treatment for women at low risk of recurrence or spread of the disease. A new study finds that some women at greater risk can safely avoid radiation.

Β© Mark Kostich/iStock, via Getty Images Plus

Researchers followed 1,600 women for a median of 9.6 years and found that survival rates were similar in two groups of patients: 81.4 percent among the patients who had received radiation treatment and 81.9 percent among those who had not.

The Editor Got a Letter From β€˜Dr. B.S.’ So Did a Lot of Other Editors.

4 November 2025 at 12:18
The rise of artificial intelligence has produced serial writers to science and medical journals, most likely using chatbots to boost the number of citations they’ve published.

Β© Eva Manez/Reuters

A research scientist who published a paper in a scientific journal about controlling mosquito-borne malaria infections was asked to rebut a letter to the editor sent by a scientist who had suddenly become improbably prolific starting in 2025.

The Editor Got a Letter From β€˜Dr. B.S.’ So Did a Lot of Other Editors.

4 November 2025 at 12:18
The rise of artificial intelligence has produced serial writers to science and medical journals, most likely using chatbots to boost the number of citations they’ve published.

Β© Eva Manez/Reuters

A research scientist who published a paper in a scientific journal about controlling mosquito-borne malaria infections was asked to rebut a letter to the editor sent by a scientist who had suddenly become improbably prolific starting in 2025.

Vision Restored Using Prosthetic Retinal Implant

20 October 2025 at 08:00
The device could help a million people with a severe form of macular degeneration to be able to see enough to read.

Β© Science Corporation

A camera attached to glasses transmits the image on the right to a patient’s artificial retina.
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