News

Scientists have discovered how aging blood stem cells acquire mutations that give them a growth edge, creating fertile ground for the development of clonol hematopoiesis, a condition that dramatically ...
A new study published in The Lancet Planetary Health suggests a changing climate threatens the continuous availability of ...
New laser-based technology detects and chemically identifies nanoplastics in human fluids. Findings raise concern over ...
A study of about 250 patients in America, published in 2024 in the New England Journal of Medicine, linked the presence of ...
Microplastics and the much smaller nanoplastics enter the human body in various ways, for example through food or the air we breathe. A large proportion is excreted, but a certain amount remains in ...
Microplastics and much smaller nanoplastics enter the human body in various ways, for example through food or the air we ...
Microplastics and the much smaller nanoplastics enter the human body in various ways, for example through food or the air we breathe.
Interestingly, in 2016 a pair of researchers in Brazil named Marcos Sterkel and Pedro Oliveira discovered that blood-feeding insects, such as fleas, flies, and mosquitoes have evolved the ability ...
Smart scales, also known as body fat scales, not only measure your body weight and Body Mass Index (), but also provide a breakdown of your body composition and how it changes over time.They look ...
Researchers have discovered that a medication typically prescribed for rare diseases could make human blood deadly for mosquitoes, offering a potential lead to curb diseases such as malaria.
Scientists have a radical new plan for controlling mosquito numbers and fighting malaria: lacing human blood with a drug that's poisonous for the insects, so sucking on this blood marks their last ...
A drug for a rare disease makes human blood deadly to mosquitoes and could help in the fight against malaria, researchers have found. Several methods are currently used to reduce mosquito numbers ...