Researchers uncover promising evidence that xenon gas, commonly used in anesthesia, may help reduce brain deterioration and ...
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 ...
Able to cross the blood-brain barrier, Xenon gas seemed to perk the mice right up, which began to become particularly active ...
An inert and unreactive gas may not seem like an obvious candidate for treating Alzheimer's disease, yet a new study in mice ...
Researchers from Washington University in St. Louis and Brigham and Women's Hospital published findings in Science Translational Medicine showing that inhaling xenon gas improved cognition in ...
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.