Old Articles: <Older 1991-2000 Newer> |
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AskMen.com October 10, 2012 |
Healthy Hair And Skin Apparently, the key to finding less-expensive, easy-to-use products is mainly about reading the key ingredients. |
Chemistry World October 9, 2012 Elinor Hughes |
A cancer treatment that goes further A cancer treatment that uses titanium dioxide nanoparticles to kill tumor cells has been given a sound revamping by researchers in Japan. |
Pharmaceutical Executive October 1, 2012 Ben Comer |
Stem Cells: A Promise Deferred? Ideology, politics, and a stilted political debate may be causing pharma to overlook the potential of emerging stem cell therapies in fostering a new generation of cures. |
Chemistry World October 7, 2012 David Bradley |
Magnetic nanoparticles zap cancer Nanoparticles can be used as a remote-controlled magnetic death switch to kill cancer cells, according to researchers from Korea. |
Lucire September 25, 2012 |
Fran Drescher, on Top The enduring actress and activist launches an ambitious extension to her popular Cancer Schmancer charity during the height of Emmys' week, report Elyse Glickman and Cheri Fox |
Chemistry World October 4, 2012 Emma Eley |
Bacterial growth is inhibited by broccoli Chemists from Israel say that the isothiocyanates sulforaphane and erucin, found in brassicaceae vegetables such as broccoli, Brussels sprouts, cabbage and cauliflower, inhibit growth of the disease-causing bacteria Pseudomonas aeruginosa. |
Chemistry World September 28, 2012 Andrew Turley |
Regorafenib approved in US US authorities have approved Stivarga (regorafenib) tablets for the treatment of advanced colorectal cancer. |
Chemistry World September 24, 2012 Andrew Turley |
Pineapple gel approved for burns NexoBrid gel from privately owned biotech MediWound, contains proteolytic enzymes from the stem of the pineapple plant. |
HHMI Bulletin Fall 2012 Sarah C. P. Williams |
The Fat You Can't See Without the liver acting as a filter and energy producer, a person can't survive, and no artificial organ can perform all of its duties. But in one in three Americans -- and similar numbers in other developed nations -- the liver has lost its luster. |
HHMI Bulletin Fall 2012 Halleh B. Balch |
Like a Chinese Finger Trap In neurodegenerative diseases like Alzheimer's, the needle-like fibers that accumulate in the brain are not the real damage-doers. The culprits are intermediate protein structures, called small amyloid oligomers, made of a few proteins that misfold and aggregate. |
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