Scientists in Australia made an exciting new finding in a recent study.
Pioneering research by experts at the University of Sydney, the Baird Institute and the Royal Prince Alfred Hospital in ...
For a long time, we’ve been told the same thing about the heart. Once it’s damaged, that’s it. Heart cells don’t grow back.
Despite its importance, the heart is one of the few tissues in the human body that can't repair damage very well – or at least, that's what has long been presumed. Scientists in Australia have now ...
A Tokyo-based startup said transplants of cardiac muscle cells that it engineered from induced pluripotent stem (iPS) cells ...
The study, published in Circulation Research, revealed that while parts of the heart remain scarred after a heart attack, new ...
Groundbreaking study reveals human hearts can regenerate muscle cells post-heart attack, offering hope for new regenerative ...
When heart muscle gets damaged, the result is often permanent. Unlike other muscles in the body, the heart has long been believed to lack the ability to heal itself. But recent research suggests that ...
Long thought incapable of repair, this discovery by Australian researchers could reshape future treatments for heart failure.
Scientists obtained stem cells expressing cardiac muscle-specific genes and proteins. The cells displayed regular rhythmic contractions similar to a heart, confirming that they were functional ...
Researchers have shown for the first time that human heart muscle cells regenerate after a heart attack. The study reveals ...