Tiny repeated stretches of DNA in your genome may quietly shape how your body works, how your brain develops and how you ...
A cancer diagnosis is never welcome news. But for certain types of cancers, a doctor’s confirmation can be a lifesaver.
Experts at SICP 2025 outline how molecular mechanisms and bedside assessments can guide personalised treatment for ...
In an era with less political and cultural division — and less tech-driven diversion — the stunning advances in medicine seen ...
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Kidneys from Black donors are more likely to be thrown away − a bioethicist explains why
As it is now, the transplant system treats kidneys from all Black donors as if they are at higher risk for failing, even though only some are.
Driving patterns changed early in people with mild memory problems. Simple GPS data helped identify these changes years ...
Artificial Intelligence that detects breast cancer, enables medical imaging in low-resource countries and that identifies the ...
Comic Book Resources on MSN
Ethan Hawke’s Gattaca still delivers 1 of the greatest final scenes in movie history
Ethan Hawke often describes his role in his 1997 sci-fi film as one of the most meaningful in his career, and for good reason ...
Morning Overview on MSNOpinion
An untreatable disease is spreading again at speed
An illness that modern medicine still cannot cure is quietly regaining momentum, spreading faster than public health systems ...
So, what will happen to Earth in 2026? Predictions are buzzing, and honestly, it’s a mix of the seriously dramatic and the ...
It turns out that the answer was no: Your dog’s genes don’t predict its behavior, at least not in the simplistic way popular doggy DNA tests often claim.
A groundbreaking study from the University of British Columbia Okanagan challenges the simulation hypothesis, proving that ...
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