In H.G. Wells’ 1897 science fiction novel, “The Invisible Man,” the protagonist invents a serum that makes the cells in his ...
Hello Health Rounds Readers! Sometimes science is just so cool. Today we feature a study that makes good on science ...
About five minutes later, the opaque skin of the mice transformed temporarily into a living window, revealing branching blood vessels ... scientist who invented a serum to alter how the body ...
A commonly used food coloring can make the skin of a living mouse transparent, allowing scientists to see its organs function ...
Applying a food-safe dye that absorbs light onto the skin of a mouse makes its skin transparent, allowing researchers to look ...
A common food dye turned mice see-through, a "stunning" finding that could revolutionize imaging techniques in medicine.
BACKGROUND: Endothelial cells (ECs) use glycolysis to produce energy. In preclinical models of peripheral arterial disease, further activation of EC glycolysis was ineffective or deleterious in ...
Food dye transformed the skin of mice into a living window revealing blood vessels, muscle fibers and gut contractions, ...
A case report published in the New England Journal of Medicine describes a previously unidentified orthonairovirus, dubbed ...
In mice, the researchers were able to observe blood vessels directly in the surface ... with the dye solution echoing the serum imagined in “The Invisible Man.” “The protagonist (in the ...