Yale Scientists Successfully Repair Injured Spinal Cords Using Patients' Own Stem Cells
Yale and Sapporo Medical University scientists have repaired injured spinal cords using patients' own stem cells.
Yale and Sapporo Medical University scientists have repaired injured spinal cords using patients' own stem cells.
Roads in which waste plastic is melted down and mixed with paving materials are becoming more common around the world.
The planet, TOI-561b, is about 50 percent larger than Earth but requires less than half a day to orbit its star.
A OnePoll suvey has been conducted to find out what your peanut butter preference says about your personality.
A devoted wife in Nebraska turned despair into giggles in the obituary she wrote for her "dead sexy' late husband, Eric Sauser.
The Wilcock family, living in Gloucestershire, England, thought they found coal lumps in their driveway. It was meteorites.
The family of George Floyd will receive a $27 million award from the city of Minneapolis for his wrongful death by a reckless policeman.
Washington, D.C. chemistry teacher Jente Lee has turned his kitchen into a chemistry lab to continue teaching and inspiring his students.
Canada's Daniel Robertson has been swapping maple syrup for soccer scarves with others around the world, amassing a huge collection.
Researchers at Yokohama National University have developed the first wearable devices to precisely monitor jaundice, and real-time vitals.
Dr. Nagourney at his Nagourney Cancer Institute in CA is doubling cancer survival success rates with functional profiling of tumors in a lab.
Ohio State has developed peptides that trick SARS-CoV-2 into interacting with a replica rather than the actual human cell, preventing infection.