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Intercellular fluid flow, not just cell structure, governs how tissues respond to physical forces
In a paper appearing in Nature Physics, the researchers show that when a tissue is pressed or squeezed, it is more compliant and relaxes more quickly when the fluid between its cells flows easily.
These images use color markers—blue for nuclei, red for cell membranes, and green for fluid—to show that spaces between cells shrink as fluid moves out during tissue compression, from left to right ...
Water makes up around 60 percent of the human body. More than half of this water sloshes around inside the cells that make up organs and tissues. Much of the remaining water flows in the nooks and ...
Abstract and Introduction Use of Central Venous Oxygen Saturation to Titrate Fluid Therapy and Oxygen Delivery Use of Central Venous-to-arterial Carbon Dioxide Difference to Address Adequacy of Oxygen ...
Integrating Pathologic Stage and Perioperative Circulating Tumor Cell Variations: Early Relapse Prediction Model for Resectable Non–Small Cell Lung Cancer All study participants simultaneously ...
Because of tumor heterogeneity and sampling error, next-generation sequencing (NGS) of glioblastoma (GBM) tumors may provide an incomplete picture of the somatic mutational landscape. We hypothesized ...
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