Health
Israeli scientists stop brain tumors in mice, say may cure a deadly cancer – The Times of Israel
Glioblastoma in rodents, and in human cells in a lab model, blocked by compound that researchers see as ‘paving the way for a new therapy’ for deadliest brain cancer…

Israeli researchers believe they can make the most lethal brain cancer less deadly, after they stopped tumors from growing in mice and in a lab model using human cells by blocking specific proteins from reaching them.
Glioblastoma only has a 40 percent survival rate after a year and 5% after five years, even with surgery, radiotherapy and chemotherapy.
But Prof. Ronit Satchi-Fainaro said she is hopeful that her new study, conducted on mice and lab models, will make the illness chronic but manageable…
-
Noosa News17 hours ago
Commissioner thanks police officer who threw a speed radar at a car
-
General13 hours ago
Dairy farmers devastated by floods across parts of New South Wales
-
Noosa News22 hours ago
Brisbane news live: Federal fund for council’s cyclone clean-up dries up
-
Noosa News15 hours ago
No matter what happens in his Origin debut, history beckons for rookie maroon Robert Toia