Around 200 million animals are used in lab research around the world each year. Organoids may one day replace them.
Discover UCL's Human Organ Atlas: an interactive 3D platform for studying human organs in unprecedented detail ...
Some people online believe many of us have dangerous parasites in our gut and need to flush them out with herbal supplements.
Miniature organs grown in the lab can organize themselves into complex shapes, which enables scientists to use them to study disease. The trouble is they never do it the same way twice, which has made ...
Crestone, Inc. ("Crestone") today announced recent publication in the leading infectious disease journal, The Lancet Infectious Diseases, of positive results from a Phase 2 clinical trial evaluating ...
Nicole Kidman had her eyes wide open for this one. The star revealed she “can do an autopsy,” while discussing her new role ...
Arjun Dhingra, founder of LFG Energy and host of the LFG Energy Podcast, today announced the return of the Better Human Project, a powerful live experience designed to help entrepreneurs and high ...
IF TIMING IS everything, then Thomas Hartung picked a bad moment to make his move. Dr Hartung is an environmental toxicologist at Johns Hopkins University, in Baltimore, who has spent his career ...
Two teenage brothers, once in foster care, created Eagle Scout projects to help other adoptees. James and Julian Oliveira filled 200 bags with practical and comforting items for children in the ...
Stephanie Jenkins does not work for, consult, own shares in or receive funding from any company or organization that would benefit from this article, and has disclosed no relevant affiliations beyond ...
WASHINGTON — Prosecutors have charged the leader of an international human smuggling ring who conspired to illegally bring dozens of migrants across the northern border to New York City and other ...
One popular strain of urban-policy thinking opposes gentrification—the arrival of affluent people into poor neighborhoods—and argues that poverty should be rectified by ever greater expenditure on ...