Neuromics

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Neuromics

@Neuromics

Neuromics is a bioreagents company providing human cells, media, sera, and plenty more for neuroscience, cancer, pain, and more research.

Minneapolis, MN Katılım Mart 2009
455 Takip Edilen541 Takipçiler
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Neuromics
Neuromics@Neuromics·
We would be delighted if you joined us on our Neuromics Company Page (tinyurl.com/msy8hrax). We post unique solutions, applications, relevant publications, biomedical breakthroughs, and promotions.
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Neuromics
Neuromics@Neuromics·
What is this image of? Guesses? Hint: it's not a landscape.
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Neuromics
Neuromics@Neuromics·
@Neuromics post of the week. It is not about the medical sciences or public health. It is a message to take to heart, nevertheless. MAHA is a dangerous slogan. It becomes tragically ironic in the face of food insecurity.
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Neuromics
Neuromics@Neuromics·
Thank you @ShiningScience.
Shining Science@ShiningScience

🚨 Japan just approved the commercial use of reprogrammed stem cells to restore failing hearts. Japan has officially approved the world’s first commercially available medical products derived from induced pluripotent stem (iPS) cells, marking a historic leap in regenerative medicine. The health ministry gave the green light to "ReHeart," a revolutionary treatment consisting of heart muscle sheets developed by the medical startup Cuorips. Designed to treat severe heart failure, these sheets work by stimulating the growth of new blood vessels and restoring cardiac function. This breakthrough comes over a decade after Japanese scientist Shinya Yamanaka won the Nobel Prize for discovering how to reprogram mature cells into a juvenile state, effectively bypassing the ethical concerns associated with embryonic stem cells. Expected to reach patients as early as this summer, the treatment received a provisional license based on promising clinical data from Kyoto University showing significant symptom improvement and a strong safety profile. Health Minister Kenichiro Ueno emphasized the global significance of the move, expressing hope that this innovation will eventually provide relief to patients worldwide. By transforming specialized adult cells into versatile building blocks capable of repairing damaged organs, Japan is positioning itself at the forefront of a new era where previously irreversible heart damage can be physically mended using a patient's own cellular potential. source: Agence France-Presse. (2026, March 9). Stem Cell Treatments For Heart Failure Approved in World First. AFP News.

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Neuromics
Neuromics@Neuromics·
Thank you @ShiningScience. This is big news.
Shining Science@ShiningScience

🚨 Japan just approved the commercial use of reprogrammed stem cells to restore failing hearts. Japan has officially approved the world’s first commercially available medical products derived from induced pluripotent stem (iPS) cells, marking a historic leap in regenerative medicine. The health ministry gave the green light to "ReHeart," a revolutionary treatment consisting of heart muscle sheets developed by the medical startup Cuorips. Designed to treat severe heart failure, these sheets work by stimulating the growth of new blood vessels and restoring cardiac function. This breakthrough comes over a decade after Japanese scientist Shinya Yamanaka won the Nobel Prize for discovering how to reprogram mature cells into a juvenile state, effectively bypassing the ethical concerns associated with embryonic stem cells. Expected to reach patients as early as this summer, the treatment received a provisional license based on promising clinical data from Kyoto University showing significant symptom improvement and a strong safety profile. Health Minister Kenichiro Ueno emphasized the global significance of the move, expressing hope that this innovation will eventually provide relief to patients worldwide. By transforming specialized adult cells into versatile building blocks capable of repairing damaged organs, Japan is positioning itself at the forefront of a new era where previously irreversible heart damage can be physically mended using a patient's own cellular potential. source: Agence France-Presse. (2026, March 9). Stem Cell Treatments For Heart Failure Approved in World First. AFP News.

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Neuromics
Neuromics@Neuromics·
🧠 You probably didn't know. This is an important week for @Neuromics.
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PsyPost.org
PsyPost.org@PsyPost·
A new study shows that improving your cardiovascular endurance changes your neural chemistry. Fitter individuals release larger amounts of a restorative protein after a single workout, which helps the brain manage its energy more efficiently. dlvr.it/TRQdvR
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Stanford Medicine
Stanford Medicine@StanfordMed·
Meet Reena Thomas, a neuro-oncologist at Stanford Medicine harnessing the immune system to fight brain and nervous system tumors. Find out what drew her to this field — and how she takes her coffee. @stanfordcancer
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Neuromics
Neuromics@Neuromics·
So true. I have had sales managers from Engineering/Research. They always went in thinking sales were easy. They loved presenting features and benefits... PowerPoint jockeys. We sold enterprise software involving buy-in from the C-Suite. They lasted until banned from participating in sales campaigns.
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a16z
a16z@a16z·
Engineers and salespeople think in completely different ways. - Engineers: "If you ask them a question, a hundred percent of them will try and think of what is the correct answer to that question." - Salespeople: "If you're a salesperson, your first thought isn't: what's the answer? It's: why are you asking me that question?" "And so if you have an engineer talking to a good sales guy, it's going to upset them. Because they're often not gonna answer the question." "The guys who are good at the job get rejected, because you don't like them. And then the people who are terrible at it, those are the ones that ended up getting hired." "These CEOs just wanna take a guy who failed the engineering test, put a clean shirt on him and make him the head of sales." @bhorowitz with @bhalligan
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Neuromics
Neuromics@Neuromics·
Camping Can Improve Mood and Stress Regulation Exposure to nature has measurable effects on the nervous system. Studies show that time outdoors can: Lower cortisol levels Reduce rumination Improve mood Decrease symptoms of anxiety and depression One proposed mechanism involves decreased activity in the subgenual prefrontal cortex, a brain region associated with rumination and negative thought patterns. Camping also removes many common stressors, such as work notifications, social media, and constant digital input. For many people, this creates a powerful mental reset.
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Neuromics
Neuromics@Neuromics·
A short but sweet video of 2 emerging trends in the Biopharma Space @neuromics
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