Scientists discover a materials maze that prevents bacterial infections
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Scientists discover a materials maze that prevents bacterial infections
Scientists at the University of Nottingham have discovered surface patterns that can drastically reduce bacteria's ability to multiply on plastics, which means that infections on medical devices, such as catheters, could be prevented.
(phys.org)
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This post did not contain any content.
Scientists discover a materials maze that prevents bacterial infections
Scientists at the University of Nottingham have discovered surface patterns that can drastically reduce bacteria's ability to multiply on plastics, which means that infections on medical devices, such as catheters, could be prevented.
(phys.org)
Clever, the bacteria gets lost in the maze and slowly goes insane and starves to death.
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Clever, the bacteria gets lost in the maze and slowly goes insane and starves to death.
TIL I might be in a maze
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This post did not contain any content.
Scientists discover a materials maze that prevents bacterial infections
Scientists at the University of Nottingham have discovered surface patterns that can drastically reduce bacteria's ability to multiply on plastics, which means that infections on medical devices, such as catheters, could be prevented.
(phys.org)
But Bacteria infections aren't true. RFK Jr. told us so.
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But Bacteria infections aren't true. RFK Jr. told us so.
Okay then, the labyrinthine structure spontaneously generates tiny minotaurs, which then consume the disease-causing miasma.
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This post did not contain any content.
Scientists discover a materials maze that prevents bacterial infections
Scientists at the University of Nottingham have discovered surface patterns that can drastically reduce bacteria's ability to multiply on plastics, which means that infections on medical devices, such as catheters, could be prevented.
(phys.org)
Cool, serrated catheters
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This post did not contain any content.
Scientists discover a materials maze that prevents bacterial infections
Scientists at the University of Nottingham have discovered surface patterns that can drastically reduce bacteria's ability to multiply on plastics, which means that infections on medical devices, such as catheters, could be prevented.
(phys.org)
I wonder if they could develop this into a tooth coating. Preventing biofilms would go a long way to preventing cavities.