Life
An African monkey ate a rope squirrel and came down with mpox
Fecal analyses and necropsies suggest a fire-footed rope squirrel was the source of a 2023 mpox outbreak among sooty mangabeys in Côte d’Ivoire.
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Fecal analyses and necropsies suggest a fire-footed rope squirrel was the source of a 2023 mpox outbreak among sooty mangabeys in Côte d’Ivoire.
We summarize the week's scientific breakthroughs every Thursday.
A new study suggests that inherited traits explain a small but measurable share of why some people relocate far from where they were born.
The TRPV4 protein’s dual nature, found in studies with mice, may complicate the hunt for human itch treatments
A study in mice and people with osteoarthritis suggests semaglutide can bulk up cartilage between bones, though bigger trials are needed to confirm.
We can take some clues from hibernation and cryogenics, but humans aren't yet built for that kind of deep sleep.
The framework predicts how proteins will function with several interacting mutations and finds combinations that work well together.
Breast exams, birth control and family planning are just some of the reasons not to skip your annual ob-gyn appointment.
Subtle shifts in how users described symptoms to AI chatbots led to dramatically different, sometimes dangerous medical advice.
A lung cancer trial bolsters a long-held idea that treatment timing matters, showing a simple shift could help immunotherapy work better and extend lives.
A student created a low-cost baby carrier that filters sunlight to safely treat jaundice where electricity and equipment are scarce.
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