Sad sack or serious salvation? A small group of scientists is angling to replace laboratory animals with living “organ sacks” ...
Hygiene in everyday items that touch the body—such as clothing, masks, and toothbrushes—is critically important. The underlying principle of how graphene selectively eliminates only bacteria has now ...
Boston biotech firm R3 BIO is developing lab-grown organ systems called "bodyoids" with investors hoping the technology could ...
The human body may seem like a single, self-contained system, but it actually hosts trillions of microscopic organisms. These ...
Researchers have found that bacteria isolated from kimchi can bind to plastic particles in the gut and carry them out of the body.
R3 Bio has a bold idea for replacing lab animals: genetically-engineered whole organ systems that lack a brain. The long-term ...
Discover UCL's Human Organ Atlas: an interactive 3D platform for studying human organs in unprecedented detail ...
It’s far less gross than it sounds (we promise) and could have major implications for how we understand anatomy and disease ...
Doctors explain which organs humans can live without, how the body adapts after organ loss, and the long-term health effects ...
Researchers used the world’s brightest X-rays to image intact organs in unprecedented detail and created an open access ...