Early Detection of Cancer With Help of Mice

 A laboratory researcher holds a mouse. Photo: Shutterstock
A laboratory researcher holds a mouse. Photo: Shutterstock
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Early Detection of Cancer With Help of Mice

 A laboratory researcher holds a mouse. Photo: Shutterstock
A laboratory researcher holds a mouse. Photo: Shutterstock

Scientists are ready to try anything that may help them develop new mechanisms to detect cancer and treat it in its early stages. In their latest, and perhaps most unusual efforts, scientists from Russia announced experiments to test a new early detection technique next week with the help of mice.

The Promising Research Fund said the experiments will start on November 14, in cooperation with a medical team from Veliky Novgorod at the city's hospital, to examine the "bio-mixed test" technique to detect lung and stomach tumors using mice as sensors that monitors the signs of the disease.

The experiment will involve 1500 volunteers. Doctors will analyze the air that comes out as they breathe, while exhaling in a bio-technical network, in which the mouse plays a key role.

Before the test, the scientists will plant special electrodes inside the mouse's olfactory system, linked to a special program that analyzes and records the biological rhythms resulting from the reaction of their olfactory receptors when inhaling the air exhaled from the human lungs.

This helps stabilize special biological rhythms resulting from the exposure of olfactory receptors in mice to cancer signs that appear with exhalation, thus revealing the disease.

The scientific team hopes the experiment to end with positive results, and believe that this mechanism may contribute to a simple and rapid detection of cancer, which will help control and eliminate the disease in its first or second stage, before it develops into dangerous levels during which the response to treatment declines.



Britain's Queen Camilla to Miss Annual Event with Illness

Queen Consort Camilla will come under scrutiny for what she wears at her husband King Charles III's coronation. ADRIAN DENNIS / AFP/File
Queen Consort Camilla will come under scrutiny for what she wears at her husband King Charles III's coronation. ADRIAN DENNIS / AFP/File
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Britain's Queen Camilla to Miss Annual Event with Illness

Queen Consort Camilla will come under scrutiny for what she wears at her husband King Charles III's coronation. ADRIAN DENNIS / AFP/File
Queen Consort Camilla will come under scrutiny for what she wears at her husband King Charles III's coronation. ADRIAN DENNIS / AFP/File

Britain's Queen Camilla has pulled out of an event on Friday night as she continues to experience some symptoms of illness after suffering a chest infection earlier this month, a Buckingham Palace spokesperson said.

Camilla, 77, was due to attend the Royal Variety Performance at the Royal Albert Hall in central London with husband King Charles, but he will now go to the charity entertainment show alone, Reuters reported.

"The queen continues to experience some lingering post-viral symptoms, as a result of which doctors have advised that, after a busy week of engagements, Her Majesty should prioritise sufficient rest," the spokesperson said.

A chest infection in the first week of

November

forced Camilla to cancel events for several days, but she had since returned to official duties.