Researchers from Ocean University of China and Qilu Hospital of Shandong University have developed nacre-derived biphasic ...
The Brighterside of News on MSN
Scientists create color X-ray images of the future
When Wilhelm Röntgen found X-rays in the late 1800s, the world was given a new way of seeing inside the human body and ...
Love the buttery tenderness of a filet? Confused by the differences between filet mignon and tenderloin? We break down the ...
Courtney Sovinec examines the multi-patterned target used to create a new type of X-ray image at Sandia National Laboratories. (Image by Vince ...
TNF-driven inflammatory arthritis, commonly accompanied by vitamin D deficiency. Here, we investigate the interaction between ...
The review of more than 60 scientific articles showed that microplastics, among other effects, can stimulate the formation of ...
Microplastics are found in everything from the toothpaste we use to the clothes we wear and even the food we eat.
Two distinct stem cell lineages that drive tooth root and alveolar bone formation have been identified by researchers from ...
In more complex bone problems like severe, irregular fractures or resections done as part of bone cancer treatment, the bone ...
Animal bones are full of collagen, calcium, and minerals—and are even more nutritious than meat. We asked food scientists how ...
Medical Device Network on MSN
FDA clears Active Life’s bone tissue assessment tool
Active Life’s OsteoProbe is the first FDA-cleared device with an indication to measure the Bone Material Strength index (BMSi ...
When German physicist Wilhelm Röntgen discovered X-rays in the late 1800s while experimenting with cathode ray tubes, it was a breakthrough that transformed science and medicine. So much so that the ...
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