«It just reeks of snake oil,» said Michael Conboy, a cell and molecular biologist at the University of California, Berkeley, who's collaborated on studies sewing old and
young mice together and transfusing blood between them.
Not exact matches
Irina Conboy, a neurologist at the University of California, Berkeley, and her colleagues have performed extensive parabiosis experiments stitching
together young and old
mice that have been genetically matched.
Vampire stories aside, the idea of rejuvenating the body with
young blood dates back to macabre 1950s experiments that stitched
young and old
mice together so they shared a circulatory system.
The effects of blood on ageing were first discovered in experiments that stitched
young and old
mice together so that they shared circulating blood.