This project is named ynthdawleyafter the Sprague Dawley rat the most commonly used rat in biomedical research.
#joimax Receives FDA Approval for 3d Printed Spinal Implants 3d printing has begun already to disrupt the medical space,
and 99.4 percent for both herpes simplex 1 and 2. ur team is focused on developing biomedical technologies that work with mobile platforms to assist with on-site testing
According to them 4d printing will make a huge impact on the applications from home appliances to medical implants.
In the medical field 4d printing objects could be crucial for making nanorobots for chemotherapy, tissue engineering an assembling biomaterials and many more.
#CAP-XX Introduces Thinline Supercapacitors with Unique Nanotechnology Construction Examples include wearables (medical, fitness and health monitors, smart watches, drug delivery systems), portables (active
which can be used with the conventional confocal laser microscopes that are found in many biomedical research institutes.
"Pantazis hopes the technique will be used more broadly in biomedical research in the future and is in talks with microscope manufacturers to implement this technology.
Fluorescent proteins Fluorescent proteins play a key role in biomedical research. It is these proteins that researchers use to colour a cell structure or specific molecule,
This sort of'smart'container for medicines could carry out carefully planned drug therapy in a selected organ in the human body.
which represent a major milestone for designing materials with customized functions and structures for applications in medicine, optics, and energy.
and silver--one of the most widely used coating materials in medical applications. As a result of this damage the researchers believe the drug may not deliver the desired therapeutic effect in patients
Graphene is a biocompatible material with low toxicity that has already been suggested as an external coating for biomedical applications.
Together with our collaborators and students, we are increasing our understanding of the critical interactions between drugs and medical coatings,
"This means the present method can be utilized as a prescreening test for point-of-care bacterial diagnosis for various applications including medicine and food hygiene.""
a process common to delivery of many species in biology and medicine-you could go to the doctor
"These type of things have never been done before, from both a fundamental neuroscience and medical perspective,
#Innovative Hand-held Tool and App to Monitor for Signs of Skin cancer Unveiled at World Dermatology Conference Sadeghi,
and a more expensive professional version to be presented at the World Congress of Dermatology meeting.
The company is initiating an early adopter program with qualified dermatologists and receiving strong interest from potential distributors and channel partners throughout the world.
Hugh Macnaught, is now chair of the company board of directors. t was obvious from the outset that Maryam had identified an unmet medical need
Droplets of fat and water which can be produced on a large scaleliposomes have been used in several medical treatments.
which have been shown to be very effective in radiation oncology because they break cancer cellsdna into pieces.
you get this big flux of low energy electrons coming out. he finding suggests a new avenue for radiation oncology:
#Scientists Demonstrate Intrinsic Chirality in Ordinary Nanocrystals By Stuart Milnethese findings have opened new possibilities in medicine,
which could be medical benefits, while the other form, which is its antipode, would be useless.
published online in the Journal of Maternal-Fetal & Neonatal Medicine, was conducted by an interdisciplinary team of researchers from the NIH's Eunice Kennedy Shriver National Institute of Child Health and Human Development (NICHD), the University of Pennsylvania, Wayne State university/Detroit Medical center
"says lead investigator Subroto Chatterjee, Ph d.,a professor of medicine and pediatrics at the Johns hopkins university School of medicine and a metabolism expert at its Heart and Vascular Institute."
#Nanotechnology Drug in Droplets for Painless Treatment of Secondary Blindness The Mexican company"Medical and Surgical Center for Retina"created a way to transport drugs,
"The doctor Juan carlos Altamirano Vallejo, medical director of the Medical and Surgical Center for Retina, mentions that the conditions that originate in the retina are caused mostly by chronic degenerative diseases such as diabetes (diabetic retinopathy
The idea is for the medicine to be distributed in state and private health institutions. So far
The Medical and Surgical Center for Retina provides medical care and a specialized retina Ophthalmology Clinic provides consultation,
which also has an area of`Biotechnology and Drug Research of Biomedical engineering, Diagnosis and Treatment Equipment.
In that study, published in a 2012 issue of Science Translational Medicine, microchips were implanted into seven elderly women,
so could feasibly be kept on the shelf of a doctors'surgery anywhere in the world.
The finding was made by a team led by Dr Stephen Royle, associate professor and senior Cancer Research UK Fellow at the division of biomedical cell biology at Warwick Medical school.
award-winning scientists and pioneering professionals. arwick Medical school division of biomedical cell biology carries out fundamental molecular and cellular research into biomedical problems.
inflammation, neurodegeneration and bacterial/viral infection are primarily diseases of cells. Without a molecular understanding of the underlying cell biology, intelligent directed therapeutic intervention is impossible.
rapid, data-rich biomedical imaging. By merging data simultaneously collected by thousands of microlenses optical elements each smaller than the width of a human hair this new multispectral microscope is able to produce a continuous series of datasets that essentially reveal how much of multiple colors
Multispectral Imaging Color and Data Combinemultispectral imaging is used for a variety of scientific and medical research applications.
Medical researchers are able to study these frequencies to learn about the composition and chemical processes that are taking place within a biological sample.
and observe and study the biological and medical significance of RNA misregulation. Details will be published the week of July 20 in the journal Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences (PNAS.
"Mirkin is the George B. Rathmann Professor of Chemistry in the Weinberg College of Arts and Sciences and professor of medicine, chemical and biological engineering, biomedical engineering and materials science and engineering.
Antimicrobial resistance (AMR) is considered to be the most urgent and important challenge of all medical fields.
from environmental remediation to medical analysis. The polymers are synthesized at room temperature, and don need to be prepared specially to target specific compounds;
offering the example of a cheap testing kit for urine analysis of medical patients. The study also suggests the broader potential for adapting nanoscale drug-delivery techniques developed for use in environmental remediation. hat we can apply some of the highly sophisticated,
and an expert in nanoengineering for health care and medical applications. hen you think about field deployment,
including medicine, electronics and energy. Discovered only 11 years ago, graphene is one of the strongest materials in the world,
Glucolight spares the premature babies blood samples and enables the blood sugar level to be monitored permanently thanks to the sensor's novel measuring technology which comprises several parts:
The computer then uses these two different readings to calculate the premature baby's blood sugar level.
white goods, computer equipment, asset tracking, cold chain storage, industrial control and medical equipment. AEC-Q100-qualified versions are also available for automotive applications.
and compared with a medical grade handheld pulse oximter. Human trial testing results shows that the accuracy of the wrist-worn pulse oximetry device closely agreed with the medical grade specifications said Jyh-Chern Chen President of Taiwan Biophotonic Co
. This report has been submitted to the journal of Biomedical Optics Express in Nov. 2014 for publication.
Founded by a team of experts from the Industrial Technology Research Institute (ITRI) the Taiwan Biophotonic Corporation has developed the world-leading noninvasive and wearable sensing technologies for healthcare
Danehorn and Holmström formed the company, Neosense Technology, with Lars Åke Brodin, a professor of medical engineering at KTH, with the hope of bringing their technology to market by 2018."
In the longer term, Neosense Technologies'technology could also be used for adults in intensive care and in cardiac and vascular surgery.
he doesn see it as a medical diagnostic tool. t designed for exploration, he said. eing able to detect trace components, single molecules, autonomously and reliably, without the need for sample return or hardware consumables in a really tiny,
what our machine is all about. lthough there may be limited medical diagnostic applications, Youngbull envisions use of the device in homeland security, mass transit, public spaces, hospitals, schools, food production and combat theater analytics.
and are under medical treatment because it will be an effective tool to know how many hours of sleep the patient is getting."
cardiologist at Scott & White Memorial. e think that we can provide significantly improved quality of life by partnering with the patient in acting preventatively as opposed to responding
with further preclinical tests and human clinical trials to come. The future potential of the device is highlighted by co-senior author Zhen Gu, Phd, a professor in the Joint UNC/NC State department of Biomedical engineering:"
tell your dentist and even help you stop doing it. What more, the next version of the guard, currently under development, may be able to tell
when he was developing a set of dentures that alert the dentist to an improper fit
where a dentist or orthodontist can retrieve it, make a diagnosis and suggest treatment. hat kind of information has been unavailable until now,
#Researchers Report Completely Transparent Absorbers at Nonoperational Frequencies The manipulation of light has led to many applications that have revolutionized society through communications, medicine and entertainment.
real-time information about a patient, alerting medical professionals if there is a warning sign, for example high blood pressure or swelling.
Finer-grained particles are also harder to block with the simple surgical masks that many people in Asian cities have worn traditionally as protection against air pollution.
raise promise for medicine but also concerns about"home-brewed"illegal drugs. Experts have called for tight control of organisms genetically modified to produce narcotics.
The broad concept of using microscopic organisms to make drugs is not new in medicine.
Importantly, the structures are stable enough to be used to make microscopic biomedical contraptions. The research is published in the journal Nature."
L'oreal currently grows skin samples from tissues donated by plastic surgery patients. It produces more than 100
"said Adam Friedmann, a consultant dermatologist at the Harley Street dermatology clinic.""I can understand why you would do it for severe burns or trauma but
"But printed skin has more value in a medical scenario, he thinks.""It would be a great thing to have stores of spare skins for burn victims
#Bionic eye implant world first Surgeons in Manchester have performed the first bionic eye implant in a patient with the most common cause of sight loss in the developed world.
on the morning of his surgery and he explained that although his retained his peripheral vision,
and was led by Paulo Stanga, consultant ophthalmologist and vitreo-retinal surgeon at Manchester Royal Eye Hospital and professor of ophthalmology and retinal regeneration at the University of Manchester.
In a test, two weeks after surgery, Mr Flynn was able to detect the pattern of horizontal,
so that the medical team could be sure that the visual information was coming via the camera on his glasses and the implant.
Gregoire Cosendai of Second sight Medical Products, described the AMD study as"totally groundbreaking research"."The trial is being held in the Manchester Clinical Research Facility-funded by the National Institute for Health Research and Wellcome Trust,
and analyse our genes/DNA hold the potential for new and personalised medical treatments. But copying the huge amounts of information involved backwards
Kipnis also saluted the"phenomenal"surgical skills of Igor Smirnov, a research associate in the Kipnis lab whose work was critical to the imaging success of the study.
which will surely contribute to medical applications, food production and advances in clock research. This has been a wonderful experience for
Their findings were published in the Journal of Experimental Medicine. Dr Good-Jacobson said plasma cells were created
who is co-senior author of the study with Dr. Bruce Conklin, a senior investigator at the Gladstone Institute of Cardiovascular disease and a professor of medical genetics and cellular and molecular pharmacology at UC San francisco."
#Malaria's key to the liver uncovered Scientists uncover a port of liver entry for malaria parasites in a report published in The Journal of Experimental Medicine.
ultimately, use a precision medicine-based approach to develop a therapeutic approach. Our study demonstrates that genetic screening alone is not enough."
Two major not-for-profit US organisations, the National Academy of Sciences (NAS) and the Institute of Medicine (Iom), are planning an international summit in the Autumn as part of an attempt to agree clinical and ethical standards
and make the main cell types of neurological systems-the central nervous system and the peripheral nervous system-in a dish that is specialised for each patient.'
Other applications could be in better understanding neurological conditions such as Alzheimer's and Parkinson's diseases, or to produce retinal neural cells for patients with age-related macular degeneration.'
of which were published in the New england Journal of Medicine. Gliomas are tumours which develop from the glial cells of the brain and spine,
Patients who develop gliomas are treated usually with a combination of radiotherapy, surgery and chemotherapy; however it is currently difficult to work out how useful these treatments will be.
and allow scientists to study early neurological development in a way that was not possible before. Previous studies have looked at the genomes of those with autism to identify the genes that might be responsible,
The professor told in-Pharmatechnologist. com the method can be used to help small and large molecule medicines hone in on their targets. ith all therapies that are used currently particularly cancer the major problem is very little of the drug makes it to the target site.
and for personalized medicine. The new optical attachment, which includes a lens, filter, mount and laser diode in a 3d-printed case, can image and size DNA molecules 50,000 times thinner than a human hair.
Besant and his team, including his supervisor Professor Shana Kelley of the Institute for Biomaterials & Biomedical engineering and the Faculties of Pharmacy and Medicine,
an assistant professor of surgery in the Division of Liver and Pancreas Transplantation. his device is best single predictor of organ survival in our patients,
The study appears in the early online edition of the Journal of Surgical Research. Although there are accurate and reliable function tests for other donor organs
a surgical team from the recipient medical center is dispatched to the donor location to visually inspect
On the flip side, an organ from a patient with a questionable history or borderline laboratory results may be considered a waste of the surgical team time and the retrieval effort abandoned.
Most of South korea's cases have had connections to the first patient-either medical staff who treated him
M d.,of the MGH Department of Surgery and the Center for Regenerative medicine, senior author of the paper. imbs contain muscles, bone, cartilage, blood vessels, tendons, ligaments and nerves each
Ott is an assistant professor of Surgery at Harvard Medical school. Bernhard Jank, M d.,of the MGH Center for Regenerative medicine is lead author of the Biomaterials paper.
The researchers used this algorithm to examine New york city medical databases and found 55 diseases that correlated with the season of birth.
Ph d.,an assistant professor of biomedical informatics at Columbia University Medical center (CUMC) and Columbia Data Science Institute.
600 associations and confirmed 39 links previously reported in the medical literature. The researchers also uncovered 16 new associations,
The second point we are addressing is the role of the vessels in neurological pathology.
it is possible that these blood vessels could be related to a large number of neurological and developmental conditions from autism to attention deficit disorder (ADD TO multiple sclerosis.
but the research is still all preclinical, the news service reported. Other diseases have appeared to take precedence in the research pipeline in recent years.
Medical experts have said the virus may have originated in bats, that cases have been linked to camels, and that it is communicable between people.
More preclinical tests and subsequent clinical trials in humans will be required before the patch can be administered to patients,
New Device Tracks Chemical Signals Within Cells Biomedical engineers at the University of Toronto have invented a new device that more quickly
or proteins that could be targeted by drugs, eventually leading to new medicines to fight cancer.
said principal investigator Arturo Alvarez-Buylla, Ph d.,UCSF professor of neurological surgery, Heather and Melanie Muss Endowed Chair and a principal investigator in the UCSF Brain tumor Research center and the Eli and Edythe Broad Center of Regeneration Medicine and Stem Cell Research. t may be unwelcome
news for those who thought of adult neural stem cells as having a wide potential for neural repair.
In that study, published in a 2012 issue of Science Translational Medicine, microchips were implanted into seven elderly women,
The research was supported by the National institutes of health's National Institute of General Medical sciences (NIGMS) and Georgia Tech.
"This research was supported by the National institutes of health, National Institute of General Medical sciences (NIGMS. The content is solely the responsibility of the authors
how we develop the next generation of medications for chronic painhich is by far the most prevalent human health conditionnd the way we execute basic biomedical research using mice. esearch has demonstrated that men
Including female mice The discovery comes as there is increased attention to the inclusion of female animals and cells in preclinical research.
and cell lines in preclinical research . or the past 15 years scientists have thought that microglia controlled the volume knob on pain,
. assistant professor in the Department of Ophthalmology and a researcher in UNC Gene therapy Center and Carolina Institute for Developmental Disabilities, developed the experimental treatment in studies conducted at UNC.
The work and the researchers involved were supported by the National institutes of health, a Salk Institute Innovation Grant and the Helmsley Center for Genomic Medicine o
Nanotechnology, Biology and Medicine, was led by Jeffrey Zink and Fuyu Tamanoi, both members of the California Nanosystems Institute and Jonsson Comprehensive Cancer Center at UCLA,
That means Anstie team will need to work with medical researchers to improve sampling techniques, and improve the analysis of data coming out of the device,
which is published in The Journal of Investigative Dermatology, was carried out in collaboration with the School of Biochemistry at the University of Bristol, the Wound Biology Group at the Cardiff Institute of Tissue Engineering and Repair,
and the orthopaedic company, Bioventus LLC. Dr Bass added: ow that we have proven the effectiveness of ultrasound we need to explore the signal further.
a senior investigator at the Gladstone Institute of Cardiovascular disease and a professor of medical genetics and cellular and molecular pharmacology at UC San francisco. his technology could help us quickly screen for drugs likely to generate cardiac birth defects,
The results appeared in a study published online in Nature Medicine. Patients received an infusion of altered immune cells known as T-cells roughly 2. 4 billion of them after undergoing a stem cell transplantation of their own stem cells.
the Gary Jobson Professor in Medical Oncology at the University of Maryland School of medicine. ur findings provide a strong foundation for further research in the field of cellular immunotherapy for myeloma to help achieve even better
vice president for medical affairs at the University of Maryland and the John Z. and Akiko K. Bowers Distinguished Professor and dean of the University of Maryland School of medicine. his trial is also an excellent example of significant
#Uncovering the Spread of Bacteria in Pneumonia Northwestern Medicine scientists have discovered the role a toxin produced by a pneumonia-causing bacterium plays in the spread of infection from the lungs to the bloodstream in hospitalized patients. rior to this study,
. professor in Microbiology-Immunology and Medicine-Infectious disease. hese findings lay the foundation for future studies to further understand the mechanisms for how the escape to the bloodstream occurs.
Scientists from the University of Nottingham in England have discovered a fully man-made substrate that could produce billions of human embryonic stem cells and move laboratory-based research to industrial-scale biomedicine.
Morgan Alexander, professor of biomedical surfaces in the School of Pharmacy at the University of Nottingham
funded by the European commission and led by co-author Jean-Claude Dujardin, Ph d.,of the Institute of Tropical Medicine, Antwerp, Belgium. n Peru,
#Software Turns Smartphones into Tools for Medical Research Jody Kearns doesn't like to spend time obsessing about her Parkinson's disease.
Scientists overseeing the studies say the apps could transform medical research by helping them collect information more frequently and from more people, across larger and more diverse regions,
"said Dr. Michael Mcconnell, a Stanford university cardiologist, who's using an app to study heart disease."
Google Inc. says it's developing a health-tracking wristband specifically designed for medical studies.
But if smartphones hold great promise for medical research experts say there are issues to consider
and helping to democratize medicine, "Williams said in an interview. Apple launched its Researchkit program in March with five apps to investigate Parkinson's, asthma, heart disease, diabetes and breast cancer.
a University of Rochester neurologist who's leading the Parkinson's app study called mpower.""Participating in clinical studies is often a burden,
"None of the apps test experimental drugs or surgeries. Instead, they're designed to explore such questions as how diseases develop
are an obvious candidate for medical applications of the technology, as these cells not only stand at the center of many disease processes,
and medicine. t been great to be part of this exciting collaboration, and I look forward to seeing the insights from this work used to help patients in the future,
Aarhus University Study A major epidemiological registry-based study from Aarhus University and Aarhus University Hospital indicates that Parkinson's disease begins in the gastrointestinal tract.
The chronic neurodegenerative Parkinson disease affects an increasing number of people. However, scientists still do not know why some people develop Parkinson's disease.
The research project has just been published in the internationally recognised journal Annals of Neurology. The first clinical examination The research has presented strong evidence that Parkinson's disease begins in the gastrointestinal tract and spreads via the vagus nerve to the brain.
which may be an early marker of the link between neurologic and gastroenterologic pathology related to the vagus nerve,"says Elisabeth Svensson.
However, the current study is the first and largest epidemiological study in humans. The research project is an important piece of the puzzle in terms of the causes of the disease.
it is important to carry out research into the factors that may trigger this neurological degeneration,
Facts Parkinson's disease is a chronic and neurodegenerative disease which affects approx. 1 out of every 1, 000 people.
"said Maya Koronyo-Hamaoui, Phd, assistant professor of neurosurgery and biomedical sciences at Cedars-Sinai, and the senior author of the article published in Brain, a journal of Oxford university Press."
said Koronyo-Hamaoui, the head of Cedars-Sinai's neuroimmunology laboratory at themaxine Dunitz Neurosurgical Institute and a faculty member in the Department of Neurosurgery and Department of Biomedical sciences.
the article's first author and a research associate in the Department of Neurosurgery. Koronyo added that the study gives unprecedented details about monocyte numbers migrating into brain lesion sites
associate professor and senior Cancer Research UK Fellow at the division of biomedical cell biology at Warwick Medical school.
Warwick Medical school division of biomedical cell biology carries out fundamental molecular and cellular research into biomedical problems.
inflammation, neurodegeneration and bacterial/viral infection are primarily diseases of cells. Without a molecular understanding of the underlying cell biology, intelligent directed therapeutic intervention is impossible.
it requires medical personnel with technical skills and brings the risk of needle-related diseases and injuries.
It is also easy to use without the need for trained medical personnel, making it ideal for use in developing countries,
and 99.4 percent each for herpes simplex 1 and 2. ur team is focused on developing biomedical technologies that work with mobile platforms to assist with on-site testing
The UCLA team included researchers from electrical engineering, physics and astronomy, bioengineering, pathology and laboratory medicine,
and surgery, as well as the California Nanosystems Institute and the Jonsson Comprehensive Cancer Center. The other authors on the paper were UCLA graduate students Bingen Cortazar, Derek Tseng, Haydar Ozkan, Raymond Yan-Lok Chan, and Steve Feng;
and received a positive opinion from the European Medicines Agency's Committee for Medicinal Products for Human Use in March 2015.
Their findings are published in the New england Journal of Medicine. MEN1 is the acronym for Multiple Endocrine Neoplasia type 1,
Dr. Elsken van der Wall, a medical oncologist working for the UMC Utrecht Cancer Center e
#Uniting To Accelerate Pediatric Medicine Drug companies inherently absorb significant risk when developing compounds and biologics for clinical use.
As an industry, pediatric medicine faces many similar challenges. Addressing chronic and complex diseases in kids can improve health outcomes,
quality of life and reduce future medical spending when these children enter their adult lives. Surprisingly, the NIH only allocates five percent of it $30 billion budget to pediatric research
and this has been flat for nearly 20 years (See this blog post)..Other challenges I see include low commercial investment in pediatric medicine and devices, development of effective therapeutics for neurodevelopmental disorders,
and clinical interpretation of genomic data into pediatric clinical care. At the Technology and Innovation Development Office (TIDO) at Boston Children, we have the honor
and challenge of turning the research discoveries and clinical innovations made by our scientists and clinicians into new products that can benefit our kids and the public.
Boston Children is interested in breaking down the barriers that remain in pediatric medicine. We can only do that if the innovation community
This is why Boston Children is convening top thought leaders to address the toughest challenges in pediatric health care today.
The National Pediatric Innovation Summit, to be held in Boston on September 26 and 27, will bring together leading clinicians, scientists and leaders in industry, private equity,
and innovative solutions needed to tackle the toughest challenges in pediatric healthcare because the lives and well being of children all over the world is depending on us.
The mission of the Technology and Innovation Development Office (TIDO) is to translate the excellence of the laboratory research and clinical care at Boston Children into lifesaving biomedical products, devices and procedures for the public benefit e
Overtext Web Module V3.0 Alpha
Copyright Semantic-Knowledge, 1994-2011