To spare "human lives" because they want to test something "without a heart"
because mice have human bodies but no heart,
NO
because humans are too selfish to test one themselves, the most reliable, mice can be resistant to a disease humans aren't resistant to.
Peter C. Taylor has written: 'The use of SCID mice in the investigation of human autoimmune disease' -- subject(s): Animal models, Autoimmune diseases, Chimera, Diseases, Immune system, Immunology, Mice, Mice as laboratory animals, Mice, SCID, Pathology, SCID Mice
A human can indeed eat a mouse. Humans do not typically eat mice because there is not enough meat on a mouse to feed a human.
no
it is impossible for the mice and rodents to be rresponsible for causing asthma in huma because is not transmitted through animals or any other than inheritance for parents mice and other rodents are not responsible for causing asthma in human because it a chronic disease goes generation after generation of the affected family and it is an inheritance disease from parents
we are breeding mice
Mice are an example of animals that have adapted to human activities. Mice often live near human dwellings or buildings and feed off food that humans have dropped or left out.
In can. Mice carry disease and it can be carried through the feces.
I am pretty sheer they do if there from the streets because they could pic up diseases from flees. I hope that answers you question! :D
The production of acorns by oak trees affects Lyme disease in humans because deer and deer mice eat acorns, deer ticks carry Lyme disease live on deer and deer mice. If the acorn level drops, the deer and deer mice population drops, the deer tick population drops, and there are less deer ticks to give humans Lyme disease.
Yes, mice can get heart diseases. In fact, any creature that has a heart can get heart disease. Of course, mice usually do not die from heart disease; they face many other dangers that are likely to kill them before they get old enough to suffer from degenerative disease.
Lyme disease
I am not sure I understand your question. Mice are often used in laboratory experiments by scientists who are seeking cures for cancer. But there is no evidence that mice themselves cause cancer. Mouse droppings can certainly contribute to pollution and disease, but mice do not infect humans with cancer.