Walt (oneminmicro) on MSN
White blood cell searching for bacteria/virus under the microscope!
Watch a white blood cell actively searching for bacteria or viruses under the microscope.
YouTube on MSN
Carrot under the microscope: A sparkling world revealed
Prepare to join our journey into a carrot through a microscope. See its vibrant cells, amazing structures and textures up ...
When pistachio hulls split before the nuts are harvested, insects and fungi can get inside, damaging the nut, costing farmers ...
Study Finds on MSN
Scientists May Have Found The Body’s ‘Brake Pedal’ For Inflammation
In A Nutshell Researchers discovered that chemical brake signals in the blood control when certain immune cells stop ...
Decades ago, doctors created a test to determine which breast cancer patients should receive hormone therapy. Now, researchers are using the same tactics to advance prostate cancer treatment.
Goethe University Frankfurt (Germany) ceremonially commissioned a state-of-the-art cryo plasma-FIB scanning electron microscope with nanomanipulator ...
Cells come unhitched from each other in this image of a pistachio hull where it has split. Look at about three o’clock in this photo where it’s violet; the cells look like they're all squished ...
Scientists have described a novel, yet benign bone-covered growth's characteristics for doctors, so patients don't receive ...
Regular cervical cancer screening using HPV testing and/or Pap tests can prevent up to 90% or more of cervical cancers by detecting and treating precancerous lesions early, making it one of the most ...
The Gazette on MSN
Meet the Montreal microbiologist with a million Instagram followers
What do tears, semen, menstrual blood, breast milk and animal feces have in common? They’ve all been under Montreal ...
The FDA has approved a new at-home test for cervical cancer screening that could make early detection more accessible for ...
Researchers have discovered how bacteria break through spaces barely larger than themselves, by wrapping their flagella around their bodies and moving forward. Using a microfluidic device that mimics ...
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