The story of New England’s vampires begins with a scourge whose tragic trail is visible in cemeteries throughout the region.
Enteric bacteria associated with bloodstream infections are attracted to human serum through L-serine and the chemoreceptor Tsr, and in an enterohemorrhagic lesion model use chemotaxis to invade ...
Researchers at Washington State University have discovered that some of the world's deadliest bacteria are drawn to and ...
In the world of the tiny and the microscopic, a particular group of bacteria behaves more like the vampires of folklore than ...
This newly discovered phenomenon has been named “bacterial vampirism”. A team of scientists, led by Washington State University (WSU) researchers, found that the bacteria are attracted to the liquid ...
a newly-discovered phenomenon researchers are calling "bacterial vampirism." A new study led by the Harvard Pilgrim Health Care Institute has identified that a deficit in the placental expression ...
What is time to an immortal? “Anne Rice’s Interview with the Vampire” cannot help but ask versions of that question as it applies to individual figures or encapsulates the species’ dilemma.
Sam Reid is Lestat in "Interview with the Vampire: Part II." Credit: Larry Horricks / AMC Welcome to Thanks, I Love It, our series highlighting something onscreen we're obsessed with this week.
Sometimes, the bacteria can invade the bloodstream. Treating the infection involves removing infected tissues and draining pus from the body, as well as giving antibiotics for a prolonged period.
After an intoxicating and almost flawless first effort, Interview with the Vampire returns with a few new items to start the latest season. Louis and Claudia, having left New Orleans and Lestat ...