Live Science on MSN
Heading a soccer ball just once is enough to raise levels of proteins associated with brain damage
Amateur male soccer players had greater changes in certain blood markers associated with neural damage the harder and more ...
Daily Mail on MSN
Heading a football just once can raise levels of proteins linked to brain damage, scientists warn
Heading a football just once is enough to temporarily raise levels of proteins linked to brain damage, a study reveals.
A new study has revealed a group of blood proteins that are altered in people who go on to develop multiple sclerosis (MS), in some cases more than a decade before diagnosis. The findings offer hope ...
An AI-assisted model based on 71 different blood proteins could help doctors better predict retinal degeneration in diabetic ...
Blood protein levels change markedly already during childhood and adolescence, and differences between girls and boys become increasingly pronounced with age. This is shown by a new study in Nature ...
Blood protein levels change markedly already during childhood and adolescence, and differences between girls and boys become increasingly pronounced with age. This is shown by a new study published in ...
Blood protein levels change markedly already during childhood and adolescence, and differences between girls and boys become increasingly pronounced with age. This is shown by a new study in Nature ...
Elevated levels of five proteins in our blood can help predict risk of mortality, a new study from the University of Surrey finds. Scientists believe the proteins (PLAUR, SERPINA3, CRIM1, DDR1 and ...
The consequence of low blood protein depends on how low the protein becomes, which protein is low, and the cause of the low protein. Having a correct level of protein in the blood is essential for ...
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