Morning Overview on MSN
Study: Vagus nerve stimulation reversed stress-related memory deficits
A team of researchers has shown that noninvasive electrical stimulation of the vagus nerve through the ear can reverse memory ...
Martin Young, Ph.D., in the University of Alabama at Birmingham Division of Cardiovascular Disease, says springing forward one hour is associated not only with increased accidents, but also increased ...
A new study from Scripps Research reveals how a key touch-sensing protein detects mechanical forces with remarkable precision. Each time something lightly presses against your skin, specialized sensor ...
An autonomous platform uses machine learning and patterned light to detect and terminate cardiac arrhythmias in real time without electrical shocks.
Not just bones: How calcium affects the nervous system and muscles, its connection to chronic stress, and why it’s important ...
When we learn something new, our brain cells (neurons) communicate with each other through electrical and chemical signals. If the same group of neurons communicate together often, the connections ...
Morning Overview on MSN
Psychedelics reshape myelin and may rewrite PTSD in the brain
A preclinical study published in Biological Psychiatry has found that repeated low doses of psilocybin and MDMA reshape ...
Neurodegenerative disease profoundly affects structures and pathways responsible for memory, cognition, and higher-order ...
Researchers have developed a human intestinal cell model that closely mimics the structure and function of the human gut, enabling more precise prediction of drug-induced gastrointestinal toxicity ...
Researchers simulated nearly every molecule in a bacterial cell — and then watched the cell grow and reproduce.
After a heart attack, cardiologists can reopen blocked vessels and restore blood flow, but the muscle cells that died will never be replaced.
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