Hidden sex differences may explain why lupus strikes women far more often
Ahead of World Lupus Day on May 10, new research from the Garvan Institute of Medical Research and UNSW Sydney helps explain why women are significantly more likely to be diagnosed with an autoimmune disease—a condition where the immune system misfires and mistakenly attacks the body's own healthy t
ORIGINAL SOURCE →via Medical Xpress
ADVERTISEMENT
⚡ STAY AHEAD
Events like this, convergence-verified across 689 sources, land in your inbox every Sunday. Free.
GET THE SUNDAY BRIEFING →RELATED · AU
- [CONFLICT] Using songlines, elders codify traditional knowledge to care for Country
- [CONFLICT] Jacobs Solutions (J) Joins Sydney Metro West Station Design Project
- [HEALTH] Australian women linked to ISIS arrested, accused of slavery after Syrian return
- [TECH] Apple Adds Apple Watch to Education Store in Australia, China, Japan, and More
- [CONFLICT] This is a feel good image for me. These two adorable young Australian superb fairywren staying close to each other.
- [CONFLICT] Three women connected to IS militants arrested in Australia