During the annual Dr Stuart Saunders Memorial Lecture, Emer Prof Wieland Gevers explored how and why humans age.
Bodies not frozen immediately or kept longer than 24 hours can still be donated, though some organs may have deteriorated.
New treatments based on biological molecules like RNA give scientists unprecedented control over how cells function. But ...
Your organs are constantly talking to each other in ways we’re only beginning to understand. Tapping into these communication ...
For generations, medicine treated death as a clean line: the instant the heart stops, the person is gone. A wave of new ...
Researchers have identified an enzyme that controls the maturation and long-term survival of tissue-resident macrophages.
The field of immunology has long emphasized the critical role of immune and inflammatory pathways in the pathogenesis of chronic inflammatory diseases.
Considering what healthcare systems might learn from past efforts to develop highly trustworthy computer systems.
Chronic inflammation happens when your immune response stays active for months or years. This can quietly damage healthy tissues and organs over time. Common symptoms include fatigue, body pain, mood ...
Senescence is the process by which cells irreversibly stop dividing and enter a state of permanent growth arrest without undergoing cell death. Senescence can be induced by unrepaired DNA damage or ...