Search Results
6/27/2025, 9:41:42 PM
..dies
Soccer player went to knee surgery in Argentina but died during the procedure
Camilo Nuin, 18, (thats funny name because its almost like Calmio Nuin which would mean "henceforth a cadaver" in Finnish) went to surgery and did not return
https://www.iltalehti.fi/jalkapallo/a/ccd2b6cc-a516-413d-86cd-01539eea621c
Doctor claims boys heart stopped midway when his knee was operated. He was the best young aspiring player of the team and the team now must think really hard how to re-arrange their tactics without him.
A lot of betting money was out on forthcoming soccer games which now go without Camilo.
Soccer player went to knee surgery in Argentina but died during the procedure
Camilo Nuin, 18, (thats funny name because its almost like Calmio Nuin which would mean "henceforth a cadaver" in Finnish) went to surgery and did not return
https://www.iltalehti.fi/jalkapallo/a/ccd2b6cc-a516-413d-86cd-01539eea621c
Doctor claims boys heart stopped midway when his knee was operated. He was the best young aspiring player of the team and the team now must think really hard how to re-arrange their tactics without him.
A lot of betting money was out on forthcoming soccer games which now go without Camilo.
6/20/2025, 12:29:47 PM
and they keep growing back
it is Mexican salamander
https://www.sciencealert.com/axolotl-discovery-brings-us-closer-than-ever-to-regrowing-human-limbs
A team of biologists from Northeastern University and the University of Kentucky has found one of the key molecules involved in axolotl regeneration. It's a crucial component in ensuring the body grows back the right parts in the right spot: for instance, growing a hand, from the wrist. "The cells can interpret this cue to say, 'I'm at the elbow, and then I'm going to grow back the hand' or 'I'm at the shoulder... so I'm going to then enable those cells to grow back the entire limb'," biologist James Monaghan explains.
That molecule, retinoic acid, is arranged through the axolotl body in a gradient, signaling to regenerative cells how far down the limb has been severed. Closer to the shoulder, axolotls have higher levels of retinoic acid, and lower levels of the enzyme that breaks it down. This ratio changes the further the limb extends from the body. The team found this balance between retinoic acid and the enzyme that breaks it down plays a crucial role in 'programming' the cluster of regenerative cells that form at an injury site. When they added surplus retinoic acid to the hand of an axolotl in the process of regenerating, it grew an entire arm instead.
In theory, the human body has the right molecules and cells to do this too, but our cells respond to the signals very differently, instead forming collagen-based scars at injury sites. Next, Monaghan is keen to find out what's going on inside cells -- the axolotl's, and our own -- when those retinoic acid signals are received.
it is Mexican salamander
https://www.sciencealert.com/axolotl-discovery-brings-us-closer-than-ever-to-regrowing-human-limbs
A team of biologists from Northeastern University and the University of Kentucky has found one of the key molecules involved in axolotl regeneration. It's a crucial component in ensuring the body grows back the right parts in the right spot: for instance, growing a hand, from the wrist. "The cells can interpret this cue to say, 'I'm at the elbow, and then I'm going to grow back the hand' or 'I'm at the shoulder... so I'm going to then enable those cells to grow back the entire limb'," biologist James Monaghan explains.
That molecule, retinoic acid, is arranged through the axolotl body in a gradient, signaling to regenerative cells how far down the limb has been severed. Closer to the shoulder, axolotls have higher levels of retinoic acid, and lower levels of the enzyme that breaks it down. This ratio changes the further the limb extends from the body. The team found this balance between retinoic acid and the enzyme that breaks it down plays a crucial role in 'programming' the cluster of regenerative cells that form at an injury site. When they added surplus retinoic acid to the hand of an axolotl in the process of regenerating, it grew an entire arm instead.
In theory, the human body has the right molecules and cells to do this too, but our cells respond to the signals very differently, instead forming collagen-based scars at injury sites. Next, Monaghan is keen to find out what's going on inside cells -- the axolotl's, and our own -- when those retinoic acid signals are received.
6/18/2025, 1:33:35 PM
season 17 begins
https://muropaketti.com/pelit/peliuutiset/overwatch-2-antaa-pelaajille-pian-entista-enemman-vapauksia/
>new cosmetic items for players you can customize your characters look
>a voting system where you can upvote and downvote after playing maps, eventually worst maps drop out of circulation so majority of players will be happy
>three new maps are Earth themed: Samoa island (jungle), Portugal (temperate forest), Morocco (desert)
https://muropaketti.com/pelit/peliuutiset/overwatch-2-antaa-pelaajille-pian-entista-enemman-vapauksia/
>new cosmetic items for players you can customize your characters look
>a voting system where you can upvote and downvote after playing maps, eventually worst maps drop out of circulation so majority of players will be happy
>three new maps are Earth themed: Samoa island (jungle), Portugal (temperate forest), Morocco (desert)
6/18/2025, 8:12:33 AM
>>507826862
The gods are displeased.
The gods are displeased.
6/14/2025, 10:53:28 PM
>>76261430
>What if someone goes to failure but still looks DYEL?
Not eating enough or cursed by the gods.
>What if someone goes to failure but still looks DYEL?
Not eating enough or cursed by the gods.
6/13/2025, 11:23:16 AM
6/13/2025, 11:23:16 AM
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