The university received a $3.2 million grant from the National Institutes of Health, which will fund the five-year study.
As far back as the 16th century, we were mapping out the murky territory of the human small intestine in anatomy books. We know, for example, that this digestive tract is—on average—about 6 ...
Rutgers received a $3.2 million dollar grant from the National Institutes of Health to study the impact of micronanoplastics ...
People try to re-balance the gut microbiome with diets or, in extreme medical cases, faecal transplants. Tackling phages ...
Deprived of oxygen, the body’s organs and cells begin to break down, with certain tissues dying off faster than others.
Rutgers University received a $3.2 million dollar grant from the National Institutes of Health to study the impact of ...
A first-of-its-kind case study has highlighted the ways in which the brain changes throughout pregnancy, including decreases ...
Probiotics may support vaginal health and protect against some bacterial infections. You can get probiotics by eating certain ...
The review found that AI systems consistently demonstrated high accuracy in assessing IBD disease activity, often matching or ...
Human breast milk regulates a baby's mix of microbes, or microbiome, during the infant's first year of life. This in turn ...
The team’s research, newly published in the journal Food Chemistry: X, examined the impact of two chemicals found in the ...
Japanese eels have found an ingenious way to escape a fish's stomach after being swallowed — backing up the digestive tract then squeezing themselves out of the predator's gills. In a scientific ...