View allAll Photos Tagged ImmuneSystem

Echinacea purpurea "White swan" cultivar

 

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All rights reserved © Tanjica Perovic

 

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Social distancing above Los Angeles during the Coronavirus

Already in 1683 self-taught botanist James Sutherland (c.1639-1719) was cultivating this plant in his Physic Garden on the grounds of Trinity Hospital in Edinburgh. He records it in the census of plants of this, the first Botanical Garden in Scotland, as Colutea flore rubello and in English as 'Red flowered Bastard-Senna from the Cape of good Hope'. Later it was given his name in Latin: Sutherlandia, and later again it goes scientifically by Lessertia frutescens. Lessertia is for Jules Paul Benjamin de Lessert (1773-1847). Usually today it's called Sutherlandia or Balloon Pea or Cancerbush. It's reputed to be an immune booster.

Apparently it's also some sort of psychic medicine: Zulus call it umwele, meaning something like an antidote to 'pulling one's hair out in distress'. In Afrikaans Sutherlandia goes by a pet-name eentjies (ducks) or gansies (geese) because of the seed pods or bladders (see photo) that float in water.

CORONAVIRUS GEGEN UNSER IMMUNSYSTEM.

CORONAVIRUS AGAINST OUR IMMUNE SYSTEM.

Day 249 - allergies

 

I got so much trouble getting out of the house at the moment. There are so many pollen in the air... even though it isn't really what most people are looking for I can't wait for it to rain.

 

Our Daily Challenge for April 11th, 2011: Exactly Three Colours

 

... this photo is brought to you by the Letter - L - press it and enjoy!

 

24mm - f5.6 - 1/250 - ISO 100

 

Facebook - Twitter - Getty

  

Strobist Info:

SB-80dx (24mm - 1/4) into shoot-through umbrella from overhead, SB-80dx (diffusor - 1/4) bare on background, flashes tiggered via PocketWizard Plus II and optical trigger.

  

© Image by Daniel Schneider | rapturedmind.com - All rights reserved

Images may not be used, copied or multiplied without my written permission!

STIKO: en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Standing_Committee_on_Vaccination

 

The STIKO recommends:

 

Especially important for people over 60.

Get ahead of the flu.

Get vaccinated against flu!

   

Tea with linden and lemon in a cute white porcelain cup on rustic wooden table. Healthy drink to boost immune system, stabilize blood pressure and helps to fight flue.

Hibiscus tea has been enjoyed by many for hundreds of years for a relaxing, refreshment and as a herbal remedy for many ailments, blood pressure, immune System, preventing bladder infections and even for weight loss.

My sister in-law brought the tea from Egypt and I enjoy it on sunny day. Please, join me when you can.

     

On a grey morning what could be better 🌞

 

One orange, whole

half a lemon, whole

a good lump of ginger, say 3 cm

some cardamom seeds

4 dates for sweetness - pitted ofc

an equal volume of water

 

blend till smooth

chill

drink

 

garnish ad lib. mint leaves would work.

 

similar to expensive health shots in an expensive UK supermarket

 

Das Immunsystem ist das körpereigene, individuelle Abwehrsystem gegen schädlichen Krankheitserregner - zum Beispiel Bakterien, Parasiten, Pilze, Protozoen (Einzeller) und Viren.

 

The immune system is the body's own, individual defense system against harmful pathogens - for example, bacteria, parasites, fungi, protozoa (unicellular organisms) and viruses.

artichoke food ready for eating. Cooked mediterrian cuisine style

.

You can buy my artworks and photos from my portfolio - stock.adobe.com/contributor/206626298/CiddiBiri .

www.istockphoto.com/pl/en/portfolio/xakar - ShutterStock : bit.ly/cidcidarius

Colorized scanning electron micrograph of a T lymphocyte, colorized in Halloween colors. Stay safe and have a Happy Halloween! Credit: NIAID

Anti-lockdown rally in London, 24 October 2020

Close-up street portrait (outdoor half-length portrait, "full-face" view) of daughter Ulrike, holding a homegrown organic large bell pepper in her left hand and wearing a light-blue surgical ear-loop face mask during the global coronavirus campaign;

Brussels, Ontario, Canada.

 

More context:

Animating Street Portraits with Props (photo blog),

Ignoring For Eyes Only (photo blog),

Adding Context to Street Portraits (photo blog).

Scanning electron micrograph of a human natural killer cell, colorized in Halloween colors. Stay safe and have a Happy Halloween! Credit: NIAID

Scanning electron micrograph of a human T lymphocyte (also called a T cell) from the immune system of a healthy donor. Credit: NIAID

My sacrifice for immune system research

 

Mein Opfer im Namen der Immunsystemforschung.

 

Credits: ESA/NASA

 

337_0219

Nowadays we have weak immune system in the body. It is very difficult to fight that virus called "technology addiction".

 

With this virus, we should blame oursleves or those technology giant companies?

 

Have a great evening!

 

Fuji X-H1

Fuji XF 60mm F2.4

ACROS B&W with yellow filter

Scanning electron micrograph of a macrophage, colorized in Halloween colors. Stay safe and have a Happy Halloween! Credit: NIAID

Colorized scanning electron micrograph of a T lymphocyte

(also known as a T cell) (yellow). Credit: NIAID

 

See related June 13, 2023 NIAID Now blog, "A Secret to Health and Long Life? Immune Resilience, NIAID Grantees Report" at www.niaid.nih.gov/news-events/secret-health-long-life-imm...

Collection:

Images from the History of Medicine (IHM)

 

Publication:

Bethesda, MD : U.S. National Library of Medicine, National Institutes of Health, Health & Human Services, [2010]

 

Language(s):

English

 

Format:

Still image

 

Subject(s):

Cowpox,

Hand

 

Genre(s):

Book Illustrations

 

Abstract:

Image of a color etching of a hand and wrist with cowpox lesions, from Edward Jenner's Inquiry into the causes and effects of the variolae vaccinae, facing p. 32. The etching, delicately touched up with water color, shows several stages of cowpox, from early blistering to its later dimpled rupture.

 

Related Title(s):

Hidden treasure and Is part of: Inquiry into the causes and effects of the variolae vaccinae; See related catalog record: 2493003R

 

Extent:

1 online resource (1 image)

 

NLM Unique ID:

101596464

 

NLM Image ID:

A033079

 

Permanent Link:

resource.nlm.nih.gov/101596464

Colorized scanning electron micrograph of a T lymphocyte

(also known as a T cell) (blue). Credit: NIAID

A microscopic image of a biopsied lymph node of a person with untreated HIV, showing large germinal centers containing abnormal proliferating B cells (bright green) and an accumulation of cells expressing the transcription factor T-bet (magenta) in the surrounding areas. Credit: NIAID

Colorized scanning electron micrograph of a B cell from a human donor. Credit: NIAID

Colorized scanning electron micrograph of a natural killer cell from a human donor. Credit: NIAID

Collection:

Images from the History of Medicine (IHM)

 

Format:

Still image

 

Related Title(s):

Is part of: Photographs of the Diseases Of The Skin

 

Extent:

1 photoprint

 

Technique:

albumen, color

 

NLM Unique ID:

101434046

 

NLM Image ID:

A029105

 

Permanent Link:

resource.nlm.nih.gov/101434046

Scanning electron micrograph of a human natural killer cell, colorized in Halloween colors. Stay safe and have a Happy Halloween! Credit: NIAID

Recurrent yeast infections are annoying situation particularly for girls, who ceaselessly obtain. Here is a quick overview of the situation and its causes.

Yeast (candida) is a fungus that may stay wherever, together with the human physique. Under regular situations, the immune system of the...

 

www.isbeautytips.com/safety-tips-for-treating-recurrent-y...

Listening to 5 to 10 songs a day can improve memory, strengthen immune system and reduce depression risk by 80%.

 

#gofabbie #gaming #fabology #fabfacts #interestingfacts #quiz #livegamesapp #funfacts #knowledge #trivia #amazingfacts #skills #education #didyouknow #schooloffabology #music #memory #depression #immunesystem

Colorized scanning electron micrograph of a macrophage. Credit: NIAID

This human T cell (blue) is under attack by HIV (yellow), the virus that causes AIDS. The virus specifically targets T cells, which play a critical role in the body's immune response against invaders like bacteria and viruses.

 

Credit: Seth Pincus, Elizabeth Fischer and Austin Athman, National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases/NIH

 

Life Magnified: www.nigms.nih.gov/education/life-magnified/Pages/11B_hiv....

Scanning electron microscope image of T regulatory cells (red) interacting with antigen-presenting cells (blue). T regulatory cells can suppress responses by T cells to maintain homeostasis in the immune system. Credit: NIAID

Collection:

Images from the History of Medicine (IHM)

 

Format:

Still image

 

Related Title(s):

Is part of: Photographs of the Diseases Of The Skin

 

Extent:

1 photoprint

 

Technique:

albumen, color

 

NLM Unique ID:

101434048

 

NLM Image ID:

A029074

 

Permanent Link:

resource.nlm.nih.gov/101434048

Colorized scanning electron micrograph of a macrophage. Credit: NIAID

 

Collection:

Images from the History of Medicine (IHM)

 

Format:

Still image

 

Related Title(s):

Is part of: Photographs of the Diseases Of The Skin

 

Extent:

1 photoprint

 

Technique:

albumen, color

 

NLM Unique ID:

101434055

 

NLM Image ID:

A029081

 

Permanent Link:

resource.nlm.nih.gov/101434055

A microscopic image of a biopsied lymph node of a person without HIV, showing the normal placement of B cells (yellow), CD4+ T cells (blue) and cells producing the transcription factor T-bet (magenta). Credit: NIAID

Colorized scanning electron micrograph of a natural killer cell from a human donor. Credit: NIAID

top view ready to cook on the tray with anchovy, lemon, pepper and potatoes

Immunofluorescent image of immune cells surrounding a skin wound, enriched in the beneficial bacteria S. epidermidis.

 

Beneficial bacteria on mice skin work with the animals’ immune systems to defend against disease-causing microbes and accelerate wound healing, according to new research from NIH scientists, published in January 2018. These insights may inform wound management techniques.

 

More info: www.nih.gov/news-events/news-releases/nih-scientists-find...

 

Credit: National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases, NIH

Glo Germ, a powder simulation, glows under an ultraviolet light during training in a bio-containment lab at Duke's Global Health Research Building on Wednesday, October 15, 2014. Ten nurses and doctors took part in a first-stage training of donning and doffing of personal protective equipment or PPE in preparation for the possibility of caring for Ebola patients. The PPE consists of full skin coverage with a full-body tyvek-like coverall, double gloving with the inner glove taped to the coverall, a sleeve cover and a hooded powered air purifying-respirator.

  

Shawn Rocco/Duke Health

T cell function, relationship to disease, and location in the human body. Credit: NIAID

Mast cell function, relationship to disease, and location in the human body. Credit: NIAID

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