A human liver can fetch $157,000, a small intestine sells for around $2,519, and a skull with teeth is valued at $1,200.
A new study finds that microplastics and nanoplastics accumulate at higher levels in the brain than in the liver and kidney.
Researchers studied samples of human brains and found high levels of microplastics, but it's unclear how they slip past the blood-brain barrier.
One reason that tonsils may grow back is that one of the operations to remove them is a partial tonsillectomy. Only removing ...
Make informed choices about your pots and pans Learn about the risks associated with some nonstick cookware and explore the ...
Cognitively normal human brain samples collected at autopsy in early 2024 contained more tiny shards of plastic than samples collected eight years prior.
Microplastics accumulate in brain; dementia patients show 7 times higher levels Plastic particles identified in the brain may exacerbate cognitive decline in affected individuals ...
Microplastics are accumulating in human brains at alarming rates, with concentrations rising 50% in the past eight years.
"They can drag it out till I'm not here anymore," Kirkland told KETV before he heard the news of the claim's reversal. "And then they win because ... they don't have to pay for it." ...
In the coming years, an unprecedented number of people will leave planet Earth—but it’s becoming increasingly clear that deep ...
A new study in mice suggests that long-term exposure to low levels of traffic-related air pollution can damage the liver and increase the risk of metabolic-associated fatty liver disease. The liver is ...