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18h
Live Science on MSNScientists gave mice flu vaccines by flossing their tiny teeth — and it workedIn a proof-of-concept study, scientists have shown that flossing your teeth could be a way to deliver vaccinations that ...
Boston type 1 keratoprosthesis with mucosa graft showed promising outcomes despite manageable complications. Researchers conducted a retrospective study published in July 2025 issue of American ...
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Interesting Engineering on MSNFloss-based vaccine delivers flu antibodies to bone marrow, saliva, and moreScientists turn dental floss into a vaccine tool that protected mice from lethal flu and triggered widespread immune response ...
A 40-year-old woman presents with a very itchy bilateral rash on her ankles and feet, present for a few months. She has a few ...
Reductions in chronic rhinosinusitis symptom severity from 2017 to 2023 are due to clinical practice and not anatomical variation.
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ZME Science on MSNScientists transform flossing into needle-free vaccineIn the not-too-distant future, your dentist might do more than remind you to floss—they might vaccinate you, too.
Inspired by a hitchhiking fish that uses a specialized suction organ to latch onto sharks and other marine animals, ...
Flossing your teeth at least once a day is an essential part of any oral health routine. But it might also one day protect ...
Preliminary data from clinical trials of tecovirimat as a treatment for mpox virus infection have given disappointing results ...
One Amish community living in northern Indiana is considered one of the least allergic populations ever measured in the ...
The device can adhere to the lining of the GI tract, whose mucosal layer makes it very difficult to attach any kind of sensor ...
Reconstructed human epidermis (RHE) models are providing reliable, human-relevant alternatives to animal testing GENEVA, SWITZERLAND, ...
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