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7 votes
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Low doses of LSD have been found to increase pain tolerance comparable to oxycodone or morphine
4 votes -
Smartphone cameras can now detect diabetes with 80% accuracy
5 votes -
Lab mice have a chill, and that may be messing up study results
2 votes -
Immunology is where intuition goes to die
8 votes -
New techniques are helping medical researchers develop new anti-cancer drugs and gain a better understanding of how existing ones work
5 votes -
Scientists are 3D printing miniature human organs to test coronavirus drugs
5 votes -
A year on, first patient to get gene editing for sickle cell disease is thriving
8 votes -
Type A blood converted to universal donor blood with help from bacterial enzymes
10 votes -
Johnson & Johnson to stop selling baby powder in US and Canada after tens of thousands of lawsuits from consumers claiming its talc products, including Johnson’s Baby Powder, caused their cancer
10 votes -
Mouse embryos that are four per cent human are step towards spare organs
4 votes -
Blind people could 'see' letters that scientists drew on their brains with electricity: scientists stimulated the brain using electrodes implanted on its surface
8 votes -
Smallpox and the long road to eradication
6 votes -
Why are clinical trials so complicated?
3 votes -
Australian scientists have made a test to check who is likely to develop coronavirus
3 votes -
Remdesivir, one of the experimental coronavirus drugs, is a royal pain to make
5 votes -
World-first tool to help medicos detect COVID-19 could save 'thousands of lives'
3 votes -
Labs are euthanizing thousands of mice in response to coronavirus pandemic
10 votes -
Hydroxychloroquine and azithromycin as a treatment of COVID-19: results of an open-label non-randomized clinical trial
10 votes -
Chloroquine, past and present
3 votes -
New blood tests for antibodies could show true scale of coronavirus pandemic
8 votes -
Melbourne researchers have mapped immune responses from one of Australia’s first novel coronavirus (COVID-19) patients, showing the body’s ability to fight the virus and recover from the infection
9 votes -
21-yr-old student from Pune and the curious case of her changing hands – intergender and interrace double-hand transplant
21 votes -
Beyond identical or fraternal: Six rare types of twins
3 votes -
A British cobbler had his thumb replaced with a big toe. He’d lost the digit while mending a shoe, but is now back at work with a toe grafted onto his hand.
5 votes -
Ten years after vaccination was introduced, no HPV16/18 infections were found in sexually active 16-18 year old females in England according to public health data
15 votes -
Australians are increasingly being diagnosed with cancers that will do them no harm if left undetected or untreated.
A news article: Patients suffer invasive treatments for harmless cancers The study itself: Estimating the magnitude of cancer overdiagnosis in Australia
11 votes -
An examination of over 4700 clinical trials found that less than 45% of them reported their results on time, despite it being a legal requirement
7 votes -
Research identifies new route for tackling drug resistance in skin cancer cells
4 votes -
Gene-drive technology could alter entire species, help eliminate malaria and prevent extinctions, but assessing the risks is difficult
8 votes -
How an Alzheimer’s ‘cabal’ thwarted progress toward a cure
9 votes -
The gene patent question
4 votes -
Slaying the speckled monster - The history of smallpox and the origins of vaccines
6 votes -
An ingenious microscope could change how quickly disease is detected
6 votes -
Maybe your Zoloft stopped working because a liver fluke tried to turn your Nth-great-grandmother into a zombie
6 votes -
A vaccine for cat allergies is in development; early results are promising, aiming for market release in 2022
7 votes -
Origins of the current outbreak of multidrug-resistant malaria in southeast Asia: a retrospective genetic study
4 votes -
Taking the sting out: Australian gene editing is crossing the pain threshold
4 votes -
Scientists successfully transfer first test tube rhino embryo
6 votes -
How 3D printing could help shape surgery
5 votes -
Pfizer had clues its blockbuster drug could prevent Alzheimer’s. Why didn’t it tell the world?
8 votes -
Viruses to stop cholera infections – the viral enemy of deadly bacteria could be humanity’s friend
5 votes -
The first 3D colour x-rays
4 votes -
The birth-tissue profiteers - How well-meaning donations end up fueling an unproven, virtually unregulated $2 billion stem cell industry
8 votes -
For patients with memory loss, working towards better diagnosis
5 votes -
Study shows "the risk of HIV transmission through anal sex when HIV viral load is suppressed is effectively zero".
Risk of HIV transmission through condomless sex in serodifferent gay couples with the HIV-positive partner taking suppressive antiretroviral therapy (PARTNER): final results of a multicentre,...
Our results provide a similar level of evidence on viral suppression and HIV transmission risk for gay men to that previously generated for heterosexual couples and suggest that the risk of HIV transmission in gay couples through condomless sex when HIV viral load is suppressed is effectively zero. Our findings support the message of the U=U (undetectable equals untransmittable) campaign, and the benefits of early testing and treatment for HIV.
9 votes -
Stanford team develops brain-rejuvenating antibodies that let old mice think like youngsters
7 votes -
Synthetic speech generated from brain recordings
5 votes -
Developing a permanent treatment for lactose intolerance using gene therapy
7 votes -
Far infrared radiation (FIR): Its biological effects and medical applications
5 votes