Spring allergies: the latest in treatments and therapies
Spring allergies give us a hard time, but they are also the most studied by science: here is a picture of the situation.
Spring allergies give us a hard time, but they are also the most studied by science: here is a picture of the situation.
A decrease in "intrinsic functional connectivity", an important neural network of the brain, has been detected for the first time in humans
Bryan Johnson doesn't just want to feel younger - he wants to really look younger, and he's doing everything to get there.
An American research, a team that brings together CNR, ENCI and plant virologists. The fight against the terrible Xylella now has many more friends: dogs.
An implant can help the diaphragm do its job. In tests it has tripled the amount of air breathed: in the future it will be able to lend a big hand to those with serious respiratory diseases or ALS.
The crucial results pave the way for a path that could finally fight the very origin of chronic asthma instead of just working on the symptoms.
Without the asteroid, would dinosaurs drive cars today, or have skyscrapers? And would we ever evolve? From suggestive hypotheses to serious (and interesting) answers.
Advanced technologies at the service of the community: so that the future does not take the path of degradation, but of efficiency. Is it possible? Here are 6 ideas.
Now cleared, 'chemtrails' are advanced geoengineering plans to spray the skies with aerosols and refreeze the poles. Fears remain, however. Very strong.
Artificial blood can repair cell damage caused by lack of oxygen. It could make transplants easier, treat heart attacks and strokes, and even reverse cell death.
Pig cells today, but tomorrow this experimental technique could preserve human organs destined for donation
An ultrasound 'patch' developed by MIT can do continuous ultrasound for two days straight: you put it on and see what happens in your body.
The perfusion machine developed in Switzerland allows a liver that has been successfully transplanted to last longer and prepare well.
Lungs and intestines are difficult scenarios even for the most advanced soft robots: now considerable progress will allow them to climb.
Harsh report denounces: world leaders are not tackling pollution in the right way, which now kills over 9 million people a year.
Electric and versatile: the 120-passenger “event” submarine could shake up the hospitality sector.
A small multi-organ model of the human body (heart, liver, bones, skin, even bloodstream) will allow drugs to be tested.
Many of us have plastic dust coursing through our veins, directly into the bloodstream.
The protagonist of an extraordinary transplant, the first of its kind and the one with the longest survival, did not make it. His pig heart couldn't take it.
Russia also has thermobaric weapons in the field, the use of which is permitted only against military targets: the risks for the civilian population are very high.
A “bath” of enzymes allows the organs to eliminate the antigens that produce rejection. New perspectives for transplants.