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A new kind of video contest has serious aims, from motivating cancer patients to solving the mysteries of how proteins fold.
Forty-three years after his death, a renowned physicist has an unexpected hand in extending his grandson’s life.
Getting the various pieces of operating room equipment to communicate with one another could save lives—but it’s easier said than done.
The United States is launching a database to remedy a lack of transparency in clinical trial results.
From hand-drawn illustrations to CD-ROM technology, Gray’s Anatomy has advanced with medicine throughout its 150-year existence.
With their online Journal of Negative Results in Biomedicine, editors Christian Pfeffer and Bjorn R. Olsen are encouraging physicians to re-evaluate clinical practices based on negative data.
Can bees smell disease?
Like shoelaces’ tips, telomeres do damage control, preserving DNA and slowing aging. What happens if we extend their expiration date?
Break a bone and pull it apart a millimeter a day. Seems crazy, but distraction osteogenesis is saving legs, arms and faces.
Acute inflammation fights off infection, but the chronic kind, simmering inside most of the population, can be deadly.
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