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These tiny clots can ultimately lodge in the brain, killing the part of the brain robbed of oxygen and nutrients.
The most common stroke involves a blood clot blocking vessels in the brain, killing brain cells nearby almost immediately.
Clots as narrow as a single human hair lodged in tiny blood vessels in his brain, killing clusters of neurons by depriving them of oxygen.
Reports of mistakes -- amputating the wrong leg, operating on the wrong side of someone's brain, killing a cancer patient with an overdose of chemotherapy -- provoke public fear and outrage.
Alcohol wreaks havoc on the developing brain, killing cells left and right.
Mad cow disease, CJD, and related illnesses are thought to be caused by infectious proteins called prions that react with normal counterparts in the brain, killing cells and resulting ultimately in death.
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The promise is that one day it will be possible to grow neurons to replace nerve cells in a brain killed by Parkinson's disease, skin to repair burns, and pancreatic cells to produce insulin for diabetics.
Scientists hope that it will be possible to grow neurons to replace nerve cells in a brain killed by Parkinson's disease, skin to repair burns and pancreatic cells to produce insulin for diabetics.
Too much aspartate or glutamate in the brain kills certain neurons by allowing the influx of too much calcium into the cells.
Mother Brain kills it just after it restores Samus's energy, and Samus in turn destroys Mother Brain with a supercharged weapon apparently left by the hatchling's death.
That was before mad cow disease, when most people thought cow brains were a tasty delight rather than a source of a horrible medical condition that rots your brain (karmic isn't it that eating brains kills brains).
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Justyna Jupowicz-Kozak
CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com