Finding an effective vaccine is crucial to stemming the spread of coronavirus disease (COVID-19) pandemic, caused by the severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus 2 (SARS-CoV-2) pathogen.
Administering medications through the nose as an alternative to injections or IVs is becoming increasingly popular in emergency departments and ambulances, according to a paper by Loyola Medicine ...
A team of scientists, led by Duke-NUS Medical School, has discovered a potential intranasal vaccine candidate that provides improved, longer-lasting immunity against SARS-CoV-2 viruses compared to ...
Twenty-four patients were randomized in the study. Two populations were defined in the protocol: intent-to-treat and per protocol. One patient (no. 16) withdrew from the trial after having received ...
“Most people don’t like to watch,” the pharmacist told me as I stared at the thin needle piercing my arm. After more than a year of lockdowns and disrupted economies and millions of lost lives, this ...
Mesenchymal stem cells and their derived extracellular vesicles (MSC-EVs) have been previously reported to regulate inflammation in Alzheimer’s disease (AD). MSC-EVs were administered either ...
Novel findings from a preclinical head-to-head comparison show that administering a COVID-19 vaccine as a nasal spray rather than a subcutaneous injection enhances the body's long-term immune memory, ...
Models were fitted to population data using NMQUAL (https://metruminstitute.org/index.html-validated installation of the NONMEM, version V, level 1.1; GloboMax ...