Medicine & TechnologyA new study from the University of Illinois at Chicago suggests that reprogramming macrophages - white blood cells that respond to inflammation - is more complex than scientists previously thought.
The study shows that tea consumption has an effect of epigenetic changes only in women and not in men. The changes lean on its involvement with cancer genes and estrogen metabolism.
A bioengineering advancement is made of the "menstrual Cycle on a Chip" depicting the female menstruation process that send signals to the network of reproductive organs involved in the system.