It was an honor having our guests speakers at our #Immunotherapy Symposium, including Nobel Laureate James Allison #BioLegend
drowning in that lovin gendrya and braime juice
This is Phthirus pubis, a human louse, commonly known as “crabs" — it is known to infect pubic hair but can infect the EYELASHES.
I came across this while making a high yield vector borne disease lecture for an upcoming talk. On the clinical pathology boards, they apparently really like to show “gross" gross photographs of bugs and ask what is it or what disease does it cause. I have a fascination with tick born disease, so it felt natural to expand and learn some more entomology. My attending was looking through my lecture and said I needed to add an example of a louse and a flea, since people commonly mix them up. Well, I naturally started to google… and ended up grossing myself AND my attending out.
A job well done. Another excellent day on clinical microbiology.
PS - up until a year ago, I thought that “crabs" were actually miniature crabs. What? I wasn’t that far off! Both are apart of the phylum arthropoda!
Menstruation products* but yeah real safety would be making them free as they should be 🙃
Colleen Conway-Welch (1944-2018) was an American nurse, known for her public health advocacy and numerous projects. She served as Dean of the Vanderbilt University School of Nursing for almost 30 years.
She received her doctorate from New York University and went on to work in various hospitals and universities throughout the United States. Under her leadership at VUSN, the university introduced an accelerated master’s programme and a PhD programme. She was named a Living Legend by the American Academy of Nursing.
Went out to a vernal pool today and saw some crazy toad action
I received a new research project in my lab today on concurrent ehrlichia infections in dogs! All the happy feels!
ft hit songs such as
i write scribbles not lab reports
nine in the afternoon (nine in the evening? morning?) (oh it’s a 12 hr time point)
mad as grad students
high hopes (dissertation version)
Steering Stem Cells with Magnets
Magnets could be a tool for directing stem cells’ healing powers to treat conditions such as heart disease or vascular disease.
By feeding stem cells tiny particles made of iron oxide, scientists at Emory and Georgia Tech can use magnets to attract the cells to a particular location in the body after intravenous injection.
The results are published online in the journal Small and will appear in an upcoming issue.
Human Adipose Derived Mesenchymal Stem Cells
More…
An assortment of scientific things from the wonderful world of biology
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