In a trial featuring a mouse model of Alzheimer's, scientists found that inhaling a mixture containing xenon gas helped reduce levels of brain atrophy and neuroinflammation.
Xenon gas inhalation shows potential in treating Alzheimer's disease by reducing neuroinflammation, brain atrophy, and enhancing protective neuronal states in mouse models.
New research from Mass General Brigham and Washington University School of Medicine in St. Louis found Xenon gas inhalation reduced neurodegeneration and boosted protection in preclinical models o ...
The study found that Xenon gas inhalation suppressed neuroinflammation, reduced brain atrophy, and increased protective neuronal states in mouse models of Alzheimer's disease. Results are ...
The gas xenon, like the other noble, or inert, gases, is known for doing very little. The class of elements, because of its molecular structure, don’t typically interact with many chemicals.
Researchers are now looking to xenon — a colorless, odorless and tasteless gas that showed protective effects in the brain when inhaled by mice. A clinical trial at Brigham and Women’s ...
Scientists have discovered that inhaling xenon gas can activate brain immune cells to break down Alzheimer's-related plaques and reduce inflammation. Successful mouse experiments are paving the ...
Xenon is an extremely expensive gas that is odourless and colourless. It's normally used as a rocket propellant or an anaesthetic that is also being touted as potential tool to help mountaineers ...
Austrian guide, Lukas Furtenbach, has developed a method using small doses of xenon gas to 'pre-acclimatise' mountaineers to the altitude of the peak, according to the Financial Times. Most successful ...
Garth Miller, 51, will be attempting to reach the peak in just days rather than months with the help of Xenon - a gas sometimes used ... for future climbers. (Getty Images) If the model proves ...