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D ormant cancer cells in the lung could be reactivated after a bout of COVID-19 or flu, according to new research. The ...
Sometimes, cancer cells that have spread become ‘dormant’ but can start proliferating again later. A cue that can reactivate ...
Typically, viral infections are passed via respiratory droplets, which are microscopic drops of mostly water that are produced when someone coughs, sneezes or talks. The viruses in these droplets ...
Hidden in the lungs of some breast cancer survivors are tumour cells that can remain dormant for decades — until they one day ...
Findings reinforce the need for approaches to minimize the risk of awakening lung DCCs and metastatic disease in cancer survivors who develop respiratory virus infections.
Inflammation from viral infections promotes cancer metastasis, offering answers to why some cancers reawaken in humans.
Viral respiratory infections usually present with clear or white mucus in the early stages. This relatively thin discharge represents your body’s initial attempt to flush the virus from mucous ...
Common respiratory infections like the flu and COVID-19 might jolt dormant cancer cells back to life in survivors, causing ...
Researchers at the University of Colorado Anschutz Medical Campus, Montefiore Einstein Comprehensive Cancer Center (MECCC), ...
However, pooling acute respiratory infections (ARIs) across all cycles of the study in a posteriori secondary analysis, UV ...
A baby's makeup of gut bacteria—their microbiome—which starts to form as soon as they are born, could help protect against viral infections later in childhood, a new study suggests.
Simple technology that harnesses ultraviolet light to ‘zap’ airborne viruses has been shown to significantly lower the number ...