Longer Looks: Interesting Reads You Might Have Missed
Each week, 麻豆女优 Health News finds longer stories for you to read. Today's selections are on Napoleon鈥檚 army, cancer immunotherapy, memory manipulation, and more.
Genetic material pulled from 13 teeth found in a grave in Lithuania revealed infectious diseases that felled the French emperor鈥檚 troops as they withdrew from Russia. (Kolata, 10/24)
Miriam Merad鈥檚 fascination with macrophages began when she looked into the lungs of a cancer patient she鈥檇 just lost during her residency. He developed a rare allergy to the chemotherapy, and died rapidly. The case still haunts her. 鈥淲hen you have a patient dying of a treatment that you gave, you never forget that,鈥 she said. 鈥淚t鈥檚 very present.鈥 (Chen, 10/28)
As a new Ph.D. student in 2011, Steve Ramirez and his mentor performed a groundbreaking experiment in the field of memory manipulation. They placed a mouse in a small distinctive box and administered a mild electrical shock to its feet. When the rodent was placed in the box a second time, it froze up 鈥 anticipating another shock. From there, the young neuroscientists placed the mouse in a different box, one where nothing bad had happened. (Talpos, 10/29)
Across the country, wildfire fighters work for weeks at a time in poisonous smoke. The government says they are protected. We tested the air at one fire to find out why they are still dying. (Dreier and Murray, 10/28)
A Somali hospital ward packed with gasping children shows how war, climate and mistrust of vaccines is fueling the disease鈥檚 return. (Nolen, 10/27)