Mouse study suggests manipulation of certain nerve cells can help regenerate lost heart muscle

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Mouse study suggests manipulation of certain nerve cells can help regenerate lost heart muscle

Human heart muscle cells cease to multiply after birth, making any heart injury later in life a permanent one, reducing function and leading to heart failure. Now, however, Johns Hopkins Medicine researchers say they have new evidence from mouse experiments that manipulating certain nerve cells or the genes that control them might trigger the formation of new heart muscle cells and restore heart function after heart attacks and other cardiac disorders.

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