Saliva

Saliva - most related articles:

- Prechewed food could transmit HIV - 4.3
- Toronto Public Health investigating rabies exposures - 3.8
- Mouth rinse gargle test for cancer - 3.6
- Stress levels decrease for women when husbands help with housework - 3.2
- Passive smoking linked to dementia - 3.1
- Beetroot juice can beat high blood pressure - 3
- Reduced stress hormone cortisol cause antisocial behavior - 2.7
- Hepatitis B hits men harder than women due to an abnormal protein - 2.3

Saliva articles

Measuring and modeling blood flow in malaria
When people have malaria, they are infected with Plasmodium parasites, which enter the body from the saliva of a mosquito, infect cells in the liver, and then spread to red blood cells.

Prechewed food could transmit HIV
Researchers have uncovered the first cases in which HIV almost certainly was transmitted from mothers or other caregivers to children through pre-chewed food.

Heavy cell phone users subject to cancers
An Israeli scientist, Dr. Siegal Sadetzki, has found a link between cell phone usage and the development of tumors. Dr. Sadetzki, a physician, epidemiologist and lecturer at Tel Aviv University, published the results of a study recently in the American Journal of Epidemiology, in which she and her colleagues found that heavy cell phone users were subject to a higher risk of benign and malignant tumors of the salivary gland.

HIV can be transmitted through pre-chewed food
HIV can be transmitted to infants through food that is pre-chewed by an HIV-positive parent or caregiver, CDC researchers said Wednesday at the 15th Conference on Retroviruses and Opportunistic Infections in Boston, the New York Times reports. Specific findings from the study have not been released, the Times reports.

Study examines effectiveness of antiviral drug to treat mononucleosis
University of Minnesota researchers have begun studying a new drug to treat infectious mononucleosis, commonly known as mono. The goal of the study is to find out if people who take the antiviral drug valomaciclovir recover from mono faster.

Toronto Public Health investigating rabies exposures
Toronto Public Health is investigating human exposure to rabies from dogs purchased at a Toronto flea market. One puppy purchased at booth #1513 at Dr. Flea's Hwy 27 and Albion Rd. Flea Market on Sunday, January_13 tested positive for rabies after being brought to the Toronto Humane Society.

6 Saliva articles listed above.


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