In a major step that could potentially lead to jaw-dropping recoveries in humans affected by conditions such as macular holes ...
When you step into the voting booth, you might think you're making a rational choice. But what if I told you that part of ...
This is not the first monkey escape in the S.C. Lowcountry. And of course, there's a Murdaugh crime saga connection.
Scientists have successfully used human stem cells to patch a hole in a monkey's retina, restoring the primate's vision and marking a successful step forward in the quest to treat age-related ...
New research published in Stem Cell Reports has described the successful repair of a monkey’s macular hole using human stem cells. Following transplantation of a sheet of cells derived from human ...
They have fixed a hole in a monkey’s retina with a patch derived from human stem cells. Researchers used a non-human primate model and evaluated whether human embryonic stem cell-derived retinal ...
The research, helmed by mathematicians Professor Stephen Woodcock and Jay Falletta from the University of Technology Sydney, ...
Based on 200,000 living chimpanzees and a lifespan of 30 years, and assuming the chimp population somehow remains stable ...
Dozens of monkeys are on the loose in Yemassee, SC. This isn’t the first time primates escaped from the facility.