The condition has been nicknamed the ‘Celtic curse’ because it disproportionately affects people of Celtic ancestry.
City Tour Experience on MSN

This is Ireland after dark

A calm nighttime atmosphere in Dublin, Ireland. Street lights cast a warm glow on the quiet sidewalks, as cars line up in the evening traffic. A simple view of city life after the sun goes down.
Anne Campbell says being diagnosed with a genetic disease in her 80s came as a relief.
From Italy and Spain to the islands of Greece and Ireland, head to these dramatic coastlines and rugged mountain areas.
From silent ramen joints to dawn rituals, these 10 places provide calm and reflection – even in the world’s busiest cities.
WITH storm season well and truly under way in Ireland, many are looking for an escape to drier weather and some sun. There are plenty of well-known tourist locations you could jet off to for some ...
On a green hillside in southern England, near the small village of Cerne Abbas in Dorset, a 180-foot-tall giant with a 35-foot-long erect phallus has lurked for hundreds of years. Constructed by ...
The opening of the long-awaited €10 million Shannon Pot Discovery Centre has been push back by several months, partly due to ...
Morpeth Contemporary in Hopewell presents “Some Years Away,” a new body of work by Michael Madigan. Reflecting on his travel ...
From towering Tyrannosaurus rex jaws to up-close encounters with prehistoric creatures, a popular live children’s theater ...
People from the Outer Hebrides and north-west Ireland have the highest risk of developing a genetic disease that causes a dangerous build-up of iron in the body, a study suggests.