Por: New York Post Life February 14, 2023
Where there’s smoke, there’s fire — even if no one else smells it. A mysterious stench he couldn’t shake has led one man to discover a life-changing diagnosis. In Dec. 2020, Neil Danziger started feeling lightheaded and experiencing “phantom” smells that reminded him of matches or fireworks — which produce an indicative scent of sulfur. “Often if I’d been doing something I’d need to sit down, and it was followed by a strong... + full article
Newsweek USA Health January 25, 2023
A new tool for cancer detection could be crawling around in your backyard.In a study, published in the journal Proceedings of the Royal Society B: Biological Sciences, a team of French researchers at the University of Sorbonne Paris North demonstrated that ants have the... + más
Opinion | The New York Times
One way to kill fire ants instantly: Eat them | Newsweek
ABC7 USA Health December 27, 2022
If a COVID-19 infection took away your sense of smell, you're not alone.Research shows more than 27 million people have experienced COVID-related smell or taste loss.We don't really understand why that happens, said Dr. Justin Turner, an associate professor of... + más
Scientists have a theory on COVID loss of smell: Damage to nasal cells | Portland Press Herald
Smell Loss Persists After COVID for Millions of People. Life-Long Anosmics Have a Warning for Them. | Slate
Portland Press Herald USA Health December 22, 2022
Persistent loss of smell has left some COVID-19 survivors yearning for the scent of their freshly bathed child or a waft of their once-favorite meal. It’s left others inured to the stink of garbage and accidentally drinking spoiled milk. “Anosmia,” as experts call it, is... + más
Without a nasal vaccine, the U.S. edge in fighting Covid is on the line | Politico
A Devious Cellular Trick Cancers Can Use to Escape Your Immune System | The New York Times
NBC News USA Science December 21, 2022
For some, Covid knocked out their sense of smell for months with no precise scientific explanation of why and no therapeutic drugs specifically designed to restore it. A research group led by Duke Health could be nearing some answers. The researchers took biopsies deep inside... + más
Newsweek USA Health October 24, 2022
Most of us have suffered from headaches, which are the most common form of pain, according to the U.S. National Institute of Neurological Disorders and Stroke (NINDS).Dr. Anne Damian Yacoub, the co-director of the Johns Hopkins Headache Center and an assistant professor of... + más
Man plays saxophone through brain surgery to remove tumor | 10 WBNS
'Doctor Who' Season 14 release date, cast, trailer, plot — All we know | Newsweek
10 WBNS USA Nation October 15, 2022
ROME, Metropolitan City of Rome — A musician had a brain tumor removed in Italy this week in a nine-hour surgery that he spent not only awake and fully conscious, but playing his saxophone. The 35-year-old male patient had the procedure at Rome's Paideia International... + más
Man plays his saxophone through 9-hour, very, very complex brain surgery to remove tumor | CBS News
Review: A phenomenal sax soloist and a sad farewell at Chicago Sinfonietta’s season opener | Chicago Tribune
Slate USA Health September 24, 2022
Dia Kline was 4 years old when she first realized there was a thing called smell, and she couldn’t do it. “I remember walking into my home with my father and brother, and as soon as we walked through the front door, they both said, ‘Ah, spaghetti for dinner.’ ” Kline... + más
I recovered from COVID but my nose didn't. Here's how I cope | Los Angeles Times
The Hidden World of Scents Outside Your Door | The Atlantic
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