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San Jacinto College offers a wide range of nursing courses and degree options at all three campuses.
Registered Nursing class lab students working with human simulation "dummy" at Ohlone College Newark Center
Registered Nursing class lab students working with human simulation "dummy" at Ohlone College Newark Center
Registered Nursing class lab students working with human simulation "dummy" at Ohlone College Newark Center
Registered Nursing class lab students working with human simulation "dummy" at Ohlone College Newark Center
Registered Nursing class lab students working with human simulation "dummy" at Ohlone College Newark Center
Austin Community College District celebrates the Elgin Campus Grand Opening Phase II on Wednesday, February 6, 2018. The newly opened facilities will host the ACC Veterinary Technology and Sustainable Agriculture programs.
Learning Center Brochure design template by Jenna Ebanks.Showcased on Inkd.com.
This brochure can serve as a program description and guide for prospective students of a medical learning center. The interior of the brochure has adequate space for many different types of information. The imagery throughout the brochure uses both photo and sketches to portray the center's goal to educate young students on critical medical issues.
Infographic by www.healthscience.net/
Featured on www.a-health-blog.com/fruit-drinks-infographic.html
Learning Center Letterhead desing template by Jenna Ebanks.Showcased on Inkd.com.
This simple yet serious letterhead would be ideal for a medical learning center.
Pictured here: A mass of tumor cells at center surrounded by several different immune system cells that can attack the tumor in various ways with the help of the camelid antibody fragments called nanobodies.
Full-sized antibodies are already used for cancer immunotherapy, harnessing the body’s various immune-system cells to help kill cancer cells. For example, T cells can be removed from the body and engineered to make a chimeric antigen receptor (CAR) that includes a human antibody fragment capable of recognizing certain kinds of cancer. Nanobodies can be used in the same tumor-attacking ways, such as targeting proteins to reduce tumor growth or blocking blood vessels from feeding a tumor.
Read more in Knowable Magazine
Small wonders: The antibodies from camels and sharks that could change medicine
A handful of animals make a pared-down version of these pathogen-fighting proteins of our immune system. Scientists hope to harness them as treatments for ills from cancer to Covid, for tracking cells in the body, and more.
knowablemagazine.org/article/health-disease/2023/animal-n...
Arming immune foot soldiers against cancer
Natural killer cells are born ready to attack the disease. Biologists are developing ways to make these cells tougher and more targeted.
knowablemagazine.org/article/health-disease/2020/arming-i...
Q&A — Synthetic biologist Wendell Lim: How the body’s own defense cells can be turned into tiny, programmable assassins to battle cancers and other disorders
knowablemagazine.org/article/health-disease/2018/hacking-...
Take a deeper dive: Selected scholarly reviews
Applications of Nanobodies, Annual Review of Animal Biosciences
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Knowable Magazine from Annual Reviews is a digital publication that seeks to make scientific knowledge accessible to all. Through compelling articles, beautiful graphics, engaging videos and more, Knowable Magazine explores the real-world impact of research through a journalistic lens. All content is rooted in deep reporting and undergoes a thorough fact-checking before publication.
The Knowable Magazine Science Graphics Library is an initiative to create freely available, accurate and engaging graphics for teachers and students. All graphics are curated from Knowable Magazine articles and are free for classroom use.
Knowable Magazine is an editorially independent initiative produced by Annual Reviews, a nonprofit publisher dedicated to synthesizing and integrating knowledge for the progress of science and the benefit of society.
==
We love to hear how teachers are using our graphics. Contact us: knowablemagazine.org/contact-us
On Wednesday, Oct. 12, 2022, the Eugene Applebaum College of Pharmacy and Health Sciences hosted its 19th annual College Research Day. Andrew King, MD, presented the keynote, "Pain and Opioid Use Disorder: Evidence Based Approaches," and awards were presented for top student research.
This figure shows the five steps to building a nanobody library, including:
- Immunize a camelid
- Extract white blood cells
- Copy genes for nanobodies, insert into phages
- Generate phages that display nanobodies
- “Pan” for desired nanobodies
Scientists are investigating nanobodies and their diminutive brethren for all sorts of purposes.
This research may begin by building a nanobody library: To identify antibody fragments that work against a specific target, like SARS-CoV-2 or a cancer protein, researchers often start by immunizing a camel or shark with their target of interest.
A few weeks later, they take blood from the animal to get white blood cells. From those white blood cells, they make copies of the antibodies’ genes to insert into viruses called bacteriophages that display the nanobodies on their surface. Researchers can then sort through those nanobodies, like panning for gold to find the ones that attach to their protein of interest.
Read more in Knowable Magazine
Small wonders: The antibodies from camels and sharks that could change medicine
A handful of animals make a pared-down version of these pathogen-fighting proteins of our immune system. Scientists hope to harness them as treatments for ills from cancer to Covid, for tracking cells in the body, and more.
knowablemagazine.org/article/health-disease/2023/animal-n...
Arming immune foot soldiers against cancer
Natural killer cells are born ready to attack the disease. Biologists are developing ways to make these cells tougher and more targeted.
knowablemagazine.org/article/health-disease/2020/arming-i...
Q&A — Synthetic biologist Wendell Lim: How the body’s own defense cells can be turned into tiny, programmable assassins to battle cancers and other disorders
knowablemagazine.org/article/health-disease/2018/hacking-...
Take a deeper dive: Selected scholarly reviews
Applications of Nanobodies, Annual Review of Animal Biosciences
===
Knowable Magazine from Annual Reviews is a digital publication that seeks to make scientific knowledge accessible to all. Through compelling articles, beautiful graphics, engaging videos and more, Knowable Magazine explores the real-world impact of research through a journalistic lens. All content is rooted in deep reporting and undergoes a thorough fact-checking before publication.
The Knowable Magazine Science Graphics Library is an initiative to create freely available, accurate and engaging graphics for teachers and students. All graphics are curated from Knowable Magazine articles and are free for classroom use.
Knowable Magazine is an editorially independent initiative produced by Annual Reviews, a nonprofit publisher dedicated to synthesizing and integrating knowledge for the progress of science and the benefit of society.
==
We love to hear how teachers are using our graphics. Contact us: knowablemagazine.org/contact-us
Academicfora takes the pleasure in inviting #Researcher #Scholars #Clinicians #HealthcareProfessionals #Physicians, #Educators to join & participate in our conference that is open to all type of medical research from academia & industry.
Melbourne 14th International Conference on “Medical, Medicine and Health Sciences” (MMHS- 2017 Melbourne) November 11-12, 2017 Melbourne, Australia
academicfora.com/mmhs-november-11-12-2017-melbourne-austr...
Health Science Senior Capstone Presentations at Sacred Heart University's Center for Healthcare Education - photo by Mark F. Conrad 4/30/19
Sacred Heart Universityâs College of Health Professions hosted a capstone presentation for health sciences students at the Center for Healthcare Education on May 3, 2018. Photo by Mark F. Conrad
A health science capstone presentation took place on December 11, 2018, at the Center for Healthcare Education at Sacred Heart University. Photo by Mark F. Conrad
Dr. Richard L. Gamelli's retirement reception at the Loyola University Chicago Stritch School of Medicine was photographed October 6, 2014.
Cross-Disciplinary Science Institute at Gettysburg College (X-SIG) research performed in Prof. Emily Besecker's lab in summer 2017. Photo by Shawna Sherrell.
PCC health sciences students took part in training last week that gave them a better perspective of the teamwork that goes into providing quality patient care.
Held Sept. 29, “Interprofessional Simulation Day” involved students from PCC’s cardiovascular sonography, emergency medical science, medical sonography, nursing, occupational therapy assistant (OTA), radiography and respiratory therapy programs. After separating into multidisciplinary teams, the students rotated through training stations representative of the various participating curricula.