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Results 11151 - 11160 of 21357 for Animal disease
  • News - 6 Nov 2006
    The World Health Organisation (WHO) says the new strain of the H5N1 bird flu virus currently circulating in China has shown no significant signs of mutation which would enable it to spread easily...
  • News - 1 Nov 2006
    In yet another food scare in the U.S. an outbreak of salmonella which has sickened at least 172 people in 18 states and caused 11 people to be hospitalized, has yet to be narrowed down to one...
  • News - 1 Nov 2006
    The transparency of health authorities in China has come under criticism yet again with the news of a new strain of the deadly H5N1 bird flu virus which virologists say could be resistant to vaccines.
  • News - 30 Oct 2006
    A test using cultured cells provides an effective way to screen drugs against Huntington's disease and shows that two compounds - memantine and riluzole - are most effective at keeping cells alive...
  • News - 23 Oct 2006
    University of Georgia researchers have found that the common wood duck and laughing gull are very susceptible to highly pathogenic H5N1 avian influenza viruses and have the potential to transmit them.
  • News - 10 Oct 2006
    A cocktail of drugs has been found in trials with animals to heal damaged heart muscle.
  • News - 28 Sep 2006
    The first comprehensive analysis of an animal's immune response to the 1918 influenza virus provides new insights into the killer flu, report federally supported scientists in an article appearing...
  • News - 19 Sep 2006
    Researchers have found a possible way to protect people with multiple sclerosis (MS) from severe long-term disability: increase nervous-system levels of a vital compound, called nicotinamide adenine...
  • News - 12 Sep 2006
    Building on previous work, researchers at the University of Pennsylvania School of Medicine have found that deleting an inflammation enzyme in a mouse model of heart disease slowed the development of...
  • News - 11 Sep 2006
    Researchers in Vietnam have discovered why the H5N1 bird flu virus currently at large is so lethal to humans.

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