The Brighterside of News on MSN
Scientists create skin graft health monitor that glows in response to inflammation
Researchers in Japan are exploring a future where the body itself becomes a health monitor, no screens or batteries required.
Women in their 60s and 70s could theoretically one day give birth to genetically related children, according to scientists pioneering a breakthrough technique that converts DNA from skin cells into ...
A new exhibit at the Science Museum of Minnesota in St. Paul is putting skin under the spotlight. It's a deep dive into what lies on the surface and far beneath, according to Caillean Kapoor, the ...
WASHINGTON — Oregon scientists used human skin cells to create fertilizable eggs, a step in the quest to develop lab-grown eggs or sperm to one day help people conceive. But the experiment resulted in ...
Guests can now discover the wonders of their own personal armor at the Science Museum of Minnesota’s latest exhibit, “Skin: Living Armor, Evolving Identity.” It features multiple specimens and ...
The method could one day become a treatment for infertility A decade of further research needed, scientists say The process overcomes an obstacle that stymied previous attempts Significant safety ...
In a controversial step that raises the possibility of a new kind of infertility treatment, scientists report that they have produced functional human eggs in the lab that were able to be fertilized ...
Researchers at Oregon Health & Science University (OHSU) have developed a remarkable new way for making human body cells behave like egg cells—a technique that could change the course of the future of ...
Researchers at Oregon Health & Science University have achieved a scientific first: transforming human skin cells into eggs that can be fertilized in the lab. Their study, published Tuesday in Nature ...
Scientists have successfully used human skin cells to create fertilizable eggs, a breakthrough that could revolutionize fertility treatment. The research, published in the journal Nature ...
Scientists have developed a low-cost, durable, highly sensitive robotic "skin" that can be added to robotic hands like a glove, enabling robots to detect information about their surroundings in a way ...
Some results have been hidden because they may be inaccessible to you
Show inaccessible results