Por: Portland Press Herald 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 one of long COVID’s strangest symptoms – and researchers may be one step closer to figuring it out what causes it and how to fix it. A small study published online on... + full article
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
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
RTTNews USA Health November 08, 2022
Laboratory-grown blood has been transfused into a human being in a world's first clinical trial.The manufactured blood cells were grown from stem cells from donors. Around 5-10 mls, or about one to two teaspoonfuls of red cells were then transfused into volunteers in the... + más
Lab-grown blood given to humans in world-first trial aimed at combatting rare disorders | CNBC
Blood donations this winter: American Red Cross urges people not to forget to donate | Fox News
Politico USA Health October 15, 2022
Biden administration officials are raising concerns that the slow pace of developing a nasal vaccine for Covid-19 in the U.S. could pose a security risk as China, Iran and Russia approve their own vaccines taken through the nose or mouth. Though nasal and oral vaccines are being... + más
Nasal COVID vaccine blows clinical trial, flinging researchers back to the lab | Ars Technica
Nasal COVID vaccine fails to offer desired protection in testing | The Hill
Forbes USA Tech October 15, 2022
Thanks to new techniques in regenerative medicine we are now closer to a future where your own cells ... [+] can be used to restore the sense of vision. getty Thanks to new techniques in regenerative medicine we are now closer to a future where your own cells can be used to... + más
4 ways a reverse mortgage can help you | CBS News
How much money can you get from a reverse mortgage? | CBS News
Ars Technica USA Science October 12, 2022
Navigate Filter by topic Settings Front page layout Site theme Comment activity Sign up or login to join the discussions! Sign up to comment and more - Oct 12, 2022 5:17 pm UTC / A man receives an H1N1 nasal flu spray vaccine at an urgent care center on October 16, 2009, in Lake... + más
Fintech Company Greenphire Wants To Make Clinical Trials More Representative Of Every Person, From All Backgrounds And Abilities | Forbes
The New York Times USA Science September 29, 2022
In a surprise discovery, researchers found that cells from some types of cancers escaped destruction by the immune system by hiding inside other cancer cells.The finding, they suggested in published this month in the journal eLife, may explain why some cancers can be resistant... + más
Cancer in people under 50 is rising around the world. Why? | WGN-TV
What you need to know about 'original antigenic sin' with fall COVID boosters around the corner | ABC News
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
About iurex | Privacy Policy | Disclaimer |