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Storia in 2 fonti

Scientists Gave Mice Cocaine. This Is What It Did to Their Brains

Researchers found that a single dose left persistent changes to the genomes of neurons, a discovery that could have implications for treating addiction.

Raccontata da404media.coinfobae.com

Confronto fonti

2 prospettive sulla stessa storia
AI · summaries
404media.coStai leggendo4 g fa

Scientists Gave Mice Cocaine. This Is What It Did to Their Brains

Researchers found that a single dose left persistent changes to the genomes of neurons, a discovery that could have implications for treating addiction.

originale
infobae.com3 g fa

Una sola dosis de cocaína deja huellas genéticas duraderas en el cerebro, advierte un estudio

Una investigación descubrió que una única exposición provoca alteraciones en las neuronas vinculadas a la recompensa y la motivación, aumentando el riesgo de adicción

Leggi questa versione → originale

Timeline cronologica

  1. martedì 7 luglio 2026·404media.co

    Scientists Gave Mice Cocaine. This Is What It Did to Their Brains

    Researchers found that a single dose left persistent changes to the genomes of neurons, a discovery that could have implications for treating addiction.

  2. mercoledì 8 luglio 2026·infobae.com

    Una sola dosis de cocaína deja huellas genéticas duraderas en el cerebro, advierte un estudio

    Una investigación descubrió que una única exposición provoca alteraciones en las neuronas vinculadas a la recompensa y la motivación, aumentando el riesgo de adicción