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9hon MSN
Every day, your body replaces billions of cells—and yet, your tissues stay perfectly organized. How is that possible?
Before an important meeting or when a big decision needs to be made, we often mentally run through various scenarios before ...
2h
The Times of Israel on MSNWeizmann lab spared by Iranian missile publishes work on nerve regenerationResearchers are making room for scientists from 8 destroyed labs; their findings can potentially help repair nerve cells ...
Every day, your body replaces billions of cells—and yet, your tissues stay perfectly organized. How is that possible?A team of researchers at ...
13h
News-Medical.Net on MSNComputational biology unlocks rules of tissue self-organizationA team of researchers at ChristianaCare's Helen F. Graham Cancer Center & Research Institute and the University of Delaware ...
4h
Live Science on MSNThe choice of sperm is 'entirely up to the egg' — so why does the myth of 'racing sperm' persist?In her new book "The Stronger Sex," science journalist Starre Vartan dispels myths and misconceptions about the female body.
9h
DISABLED ENTREPRENEUR UK on MSNEvery Baby in the UK Will Have Their DNA Mapped Within a DecadeMapping the DNA of every baby born in the UK is a bold and questionable futuristic leap in public health. If implemented with the right ethical safeguards and public engagement, it could set a global ...
Emerging research positions TUDCA, a bile acid compound, as a promising neuroprotective agent against Alzheimer’s, ...
As humanity sets its sights on long-duration missions to the moon, Mars, and beyond, keeping astronauts healthy will be as ...
Extremely aged organs came with higher odds of disease for that organ, the team found. For example, an extremely aged heart predicted a higher risk of atrial fibrillation and heart failure, and ...
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