Sentences with phrase «when human lung»

When human lung and bladder cells are grown in the lab, they turn cancerous at a higher rate if exposed to nicotine compounds found in e-cigarettes

Not exact matches

When a human baby is born it needs to begin breathing air into its lungs in order to survive.
I suspected if we could comprehensively measure all Olympians in finals, we would see significant differences [when compared to non-Olympians], but we would not see them having freakish things like 200 percent more lung capacity, or muscles that can contract at twice the [maximum] force of a normal human muscle.
When mice that had been implanted with human lung tumours inhaled these bubbles — which also contained molecules that suppress drug resistance — their tumours shrank.
When the team turned to human lung cells, they found that A20 was also less active in adults with asthma.
When growing on surfaces (including human skin, lung, heart, or bladder) many bacteria form so - called biofilms that consist of structured communities of identical bacteria.
Understanding how dolphins breathe rapidly and maintain lung functionality under immense pressure could help scientists keep humans safe when they are in similarly extreme situations, such as under anesthesia during surgeries, the researchers said.
In this study, human lung cancer cells with additional copies of the opioid receptor grew more than twice as fast as tumor cells that lacked extra receptors when transplanted into mice.
Modern studies have shown that high doses of vitamin A in the human body, especially when consumed through supplements, can increase the risk for a lung cancer.
(2) Under the bed looks like the top of a coffin, but (3) There is weight, human weight on top that you can slip into and make heavier, and you listen to the heart beat while you watch it pump and hear the nostrils hiss when their lungs press air and envy even the shortest breath.
Sulfur dioxide (SO2): Produced when the sulfur in coal reacts with oxygen, SO2 combines with other molecules in the atmosphere to form small, acidic particulates that can penetrate human lungs.
«The small and somehow disputable risk of lung cancer development in relation to SHS exposure exemplifies the intricacy of establishing human cancer etiology when omnipresent carcinogens are concerned.
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