Health
Disease-driving B cells play a role in the development of NAFLD – News-Medical.Net
New research from the University of Minnesota Medical School suggests that disease-driving B cells, a white blood cell, play a role in the development of non-alcoholic…

New research from the University of Minnesota Medical School suggests that disease-driving B cells, a white blood cell, play a role in the development of non-alcoholic fatty liver disease (NAFLD) – the most common chronic liver condition in the U.S. Their findings could lead to targeted therapies for NAFLD, which currently affects a quarter of the nation and has no FDA-approved treatments.
After noticing that patients with the disease showed a large number of inflammatory B cells in their livers,…
-
General21 hours ago
Coalition abandons ‘end’ to work from home, walks back 41,000 job cuts
-
Noosa News11 hours ago
Banana farmers still salvaging fruit four weeks after ex-Tropical Cyclone Alfred
-
Business15 hours ago
Battle of the ASX ETFs: Why has VGS outperformed VTS this year?
-
General24 hours ago
Liberals dump NSW candidate who said women should not serve in ADF combat