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New research shows a simple blood test can detect cancers by blasting white blood cells with UV and seeing how they respond. Painless, universal cancer detection could be a drop of blood away.
A Johns Hopkins team reengineered light–molecule interactions, opening new paths for early, precise disease detection.
A team of Johns Hopkins engineers has developed a new, more powerful method to observe molecular vibrations, an advance that ...
Deadly skin cancer (melanoma) cells spread by creeping along the outside of blood vessels: extravascular metastatic migration (EVMM). Ultraviolet light exposure accelerates EVMM in a mouse model ...
Researchers used existing technologies to show that exposing the coronavirus to riboflavin and ultraviolet light reduces blood-borne pathogens in human plasma and whole-blood products.