News

Tiny, microscopic bits of plastic have been found almost everywhere researchers look – including throughout the human body.
Saying one thing while feeling another is part of being human, but bottling up emotions can have serious psychological consequences like anxiety or panic attacks. To help health care providers tell ...
D printing skin, bone, and even working organs could change transplant medicine and medical research — but how, exactly, does ...
Northwestern University engineers tiny pacemaker for heart patients, eliminating need for invasive procedures and external power sources.
Scientists from St. Jude Children's Research Hospital and the Medical College of Wisconsin have created a data science framework to better understand how cells travel through the body.
Nanoplastics can enter the brain, accumulate in organs, and trigger inflammation. Learn how these invisible pollutants impact ...
A new study led by Melissa Stadt and Anita T. Layton at the University of Waterloo reveals that potassium doesn’t just ...
Patients who suffered strokes, mini-strokes or temporary blindness had levels of "nanoplastic" particles in their necks 51 ...
The liver was transplanted last year into a person who was brain-dead, and it “functioned very well in the human body” for 10 days ... more complicated. “The heart just functions as a ...
According to results published in the science journal Nature ... "The liver from the pig functioned very well in the human body. So it's a great achievement." Hearts and kidneys from genetically ...
The Department of Health and Human ... science on the nation’s largest biomedical research campus, where 1,200 taxpayer-funded investigators lead laboratories focused on Parkinson’s disease ...