Sentences with phrase «what about human diseases»

But what about human diseases?

Not exact matches

all the hoopla to tell humans what they already knew... how about some thing of real value like the cure for cancer,, heart disease, diabetes,?
Presentations covered the disease and current research on tick - borne illness, and suggestions were made about what the state and federal government could do prevent infection in humans.
Using what we know about human genes, for example, could help us extrapolate details like Neanderthal hair and eye color, their genetic diseases, and possibly even their language capabilities.
In fact, most of what we know about the human version of the disease comes from Indonesia, where avian flu goes by the nickname AI.
The researchers say they'd now like to learn more about how these genes influenced humans» ability to survive and what implications they might have for disease.
Researchers at University of California, San Diego School of Medicine have induced this all - too - common human experience — or a close version of it — permanently in rats and from what is observed perhaps derive clues about why strokes and Alzheimer's disease can destroy a person's sense of direction.
What we are learning from these studies adds important knowledge about the human brain in both health and disease.
Health improvement (allowing to post - pone / escape the diseases and thus live, healthier / disease - free longer, but not above human MLSP of around 122 years; thus these therapies do not affect epigenetic aging whatsoever, they are degenerative aging problems not regular healthy aging problem (except OncoSENS - only when you Already Have Cancer - which cancer increases epigenetic aging, but cancer removal thus does not change anything / makes no difference about what happens in the other cells / about what happens in the normal epigenetic «aging» course in Normal non-cancerous healthy cells) Although there is not such thing as «healthy aging» all aging in «unhealthy» (as seen from elders who are «healthy enough» who show much damage), it's just «tolerable / liveable» enough (in terms of damage accumulating) that it does not affect their quality of life (enough yet), that is «healthy aging»: ApoptoSENS - Clearing Senescent Cells (this will have great impact to reduce diseases, the largest one, since it's all inflammation fueled by the inflammation secretory phenotype (SASP) of these senescent cells) AmyloSENS - Dissolving the Plaques (this will allow humans to evade Alzheimer's, Parkinsons and general brain degenerescence, allowing quite a boost; making people much more easily reach the big 100 - since the brain is causal to how long we live; keeping brain amyloid - free and keeping our memories / neuron sharp / means longer LongTerm Potentiation - means longer brain function means longer heavy brain mass (gray matter / white matter retention seen in «sharp - witted» Centenarians who show are younger brain for their age), and both are correlated to MLSP).
A little less than three decades later, Ohsumi has been awarded the 2016 Nobel Prize for Physiology or Medicine for what his seemingly arcane research ultimately showed about human health, disease, and aging.
We tried to keep an open mind but some of the ideas we had — including an aberrant immune reaction — were beyond what we thought is amenable to study in wildlife diseases, given that so much less is known about wildlife biology than human or laboratory animal biology.
I wouldn't say this was a «great» article... Seems clear to me too that Jobs probably died because of his diet too tho... but what this article doesn't talk about is the health / unhealthiness of anyone who ate what jobs did but then also added meat and how long they lived or what diseases they had / or if they lived to be 110 years old... or someone who ate a different type of vegan diet like one with appropriate good proportions of whole foods in a plant based diet with fruit and no juice and how healthy or idk i've never heard of someone eating a good / human appropriate vegan diet and developing cancer but if one exists / existed i would imagine this site would of found them don't you?
At first, I had difficulty believing what I was reading, but it's true and you can read more information about the study on clinicaltrials.gov: Inoculating Celiac Disease Patients With the Human Hookworm Necator Americanus: Evaluating Immunity and Gluten - sensitivity.
It is our hope to help you gain more understanding of True Health by studying about the disease, what is it, what causes it, and most of all, its effect to the human body.
What, you might ask, are we to do about obesity, diabetes, hypertension, cancer, heart disease, and the host of other maladies that beset us humans?
Call and ask who formulated the product, what expertise they have, and how long the manufacturer has been in business.Be wary of claims that sound too good to be true, such as promises to alleviate diseases like parvovirus, cancer, and hip dysplasia.Look for certification from an organization that has independently verified a supplement's contents.Be cautious about giving human supplements to dogs.
This is very similar to what is known about the disease in human beings and much of what we know about the disease in humans may be applicable to the dog
«I was really excited to hear about their work because the cat disease behaved very similarly to what I saw in my human patients with oral lichen planus,» Fazel said.
Topics in neuroethics fall at the intersection of neuroscience, ethics, and society, exploring the questions that arise as innovations in neuroscience challenge notions about free will, autonomy, the nature of disease, the mind, and what it means to be human.
Nothing enrages, infuriates, pisses me off nore than this selfish, all about me, disease called the human being, who what?
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