The quick answer is yes, but the interesting thing is why.
Squirting a healthy stranger’s nasal mucus up your nose could help relieve stuffiness. New research shows just a few days of treatment with donated mucus can clear blocked passages for up to three ...
Curious about your snot? Plenty of people take a peek at what winds up in their tissue after a good nose blow, but doctors say this curiosity can actually give you clues about your health. "Increased ...
Scientists have used an artificial snot (nasal mucus) to significantly enhance the performance of electronic noses. The snot greatly improves the performance of the electronic devices allowing them to ...
IT may be gross to talk about snot, but it turns out you can learn a lot from your nose - and what seeps out of it. From what your sense of smell can uncover about your brain to what the colour of ...
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The Surprisingly Not-Gross Snot Sucker Parents Will Love
With a gentle mist, hospital-grade suction and a built-in night light, this 2-in-1 device finally makes clearing tiny noses ...
You can get a runny nose (rhinorrhea) for a lot of reasons. In most cases, it’s because of mucus buildup in your nasal cavity or sinuses due to a trigger or allergen. Your nose then fills up with ...
A rose sniffed through a snotty nose may not smell so sweet. Enzymes in mice’s nasal mucus transform certain scents before the nose can detect them, a new study finds. The results, published December ...
This is an archived article and the information in the article may be outdated. Please look at the time stamp on the story to see when it was last updated. WASHINGTON — A study suggests that picking ...
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