Exercise and WBCs Can Exercise Reduce WBCs? Normal WBC Count Causes of Low WBC Count Preventing Infection Exercise generally boosts your immune activity and white blood cell count. However, ...
Exercise has a well known association with the maintenance of healthy cognition in aging, but the exact, biological reasons behind that link are not fully understood. Researchers have now gained some ...
When an aging mouse with Alzheimer’s-like symptoms suddenly starts acing memory tests it had been failing for weeks, ...
Parkinson's disease (PD) is a disabling neurodegenerative disease that affects approximately 10 million people worldwide, with numbers steadily increasing. Symptoms include tremors, difficulties with ...
Collagen powders have long been used to support healthy aging, whether that's of the skin (think reducing fine lines and wrinkles while improving elasticity) or joints (think less creakiness). But ...
insights from industryDr Mhairi MorrisReader in Exercise Oncology Loughborough University News Medical-Life Sciences sat down with Dr Mhairi Morris, Reader in Exercise Oncology at Loughborough ...
Immune cells that help to fight off foreign invaders in the body also provide crucial support for muscles during exercise, suggests a mouse study published in Cell on 17 April 1. B cells are the ...
A blood stem cell donation can save the lives of people with leukemia. To collect these cells from the bloodstream, donors are given medication that mobilizes blood stem cells from the bone marrow. A ...
Exercising muscles pumps out substances that can suppress the growth of breast cancer cells, according to an important new study of exercise and cancer. The study, published last month, involved 32 ...
A blood stem cell donation can save the lives of people with leukemia. To collect these cells from the bloodstream, donors are given medication that mobilizes blood stem cells from the bone marrow. A ...
Our cells are constantly replenishing themselves — with new ones replacing old ones that die off during routine apoptosis, or programmed cell death. According to new research published this week in ...
These images depict dopamine-rich neural grafts in the brain of a Parkinsonian rat housed under Standard conditions (upper image) or provided free access to running wheels (Exercise, lower image).