HOUSTON, Texas (KTRK) -- A new study suggests memory T cells may protect some people infected with COVID-19 by remembering past human coronavirus infections. The National Institute of Allergy and ...
Study points to source of "very, very rare" cases of myocarditis and potential solutions. Myocarditis risk remains far higher ...
Researchers observed that people who recover from COVID-19 carry immune cells in their blood called T cells that target the novel coronavirus. (Pexels /) One of the key mysteries surrounding the novel ...
A new study identifies a mechanism for how COVID vaccines may, in infrequent cases, drive heart inflammation, a condition ...
Most vaccines are designed to provide immunity against just one pathogen. Vaccines for chicken pox (caused by varicella-zoster virus) were only developed to fight that one disease, for example.
Stanford Medicine investigators have unearthed the biological process by which mRNA-based vaccines for COVID-19 can cause ...
A rapid, two-step immune reaction may underlie rare cases of heart inflammation seen after Covid mRNA vaccination, Stanford ...
Researchers found flu and COVID infections can awaken dormant cancer cells in mice and humans. Inflammation, IL-6 signaling, and immune cell dynamics were central to the reactivation process. Human ...
Some cancer cells don't die; they go quiet, like seeds lying dormant in the soil. These "sleeper cells," scattered throughout the body, can stay inactive for years. But when the body faces a ...