Dr. James Lim, associate professor of pediatrics at UBC’s faculty of medicine, observes pediatric cancer cells grown in a chicken egg under a microscope.
Because the egg cell is only 100 micrometers, or one-tenth of a millimeter, wide, we monitor this fine surgical extraction with a microscope ... and the other from human (right).
A pan-Canadian team has developed a new way to quickly find personalized treatments for young cancer patients, by growing ...
When Antonie van Leeuwenhoek vastly improved the microscope ... human was called a homonculus, and scientists thought it was fully pre-formed inside either a sperm cell or an egg cell, and needed ...
Cancer cells splitting. A blood clot. And human sperm cells on the surface of an egg. But what about a transmission electron microscope? The difference with a transmission electron microscope is ...
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