Category: New products
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Simple Scaffold Developed for Synthetic Heart Tissue
28 August 2015. Engineers at University of Toronto in Canada designed a biocompatible mesh framework that makes it easier to grow synthetic heart muscle tissue for research and medical use. The team led by chemical engineering professor Milica Radisic published its findings today in the journal Science Advances. Radisic and first author Boyang Zhang are…
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Injected Gel Designed to Deliver Cancer Therapy
26 August 2015. Biomedical engineers at Harvard University devised a hydrogel material that when infused with tumor and immune-system cells can stimulate a therapeutic immune response in lab mice. The team from Harvard’s Wyss Institute, a biomedical engineering research center, published its findings earlier this month in the journal Nature Communications (paid subscription required). The…
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Alerts in Health Records Cut Delays in Cancer Diagnosis
25 August 2015. Medical researchers found electronic triggers that alert physicians when test results suggest a potential for cancer, reduce delays for patients needing follow-up care. The team led by Hardeep Singh, a professor at Baylor College of Medicine in Houston, published its findings yesterday in Journal of Clinical Oncology (paid subscription required). In addition…
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All-Purpose Hand-Held Device Checks for Vital Signs
24 August 2015. Biomedical engineers at Johns Hopkins University in Baltimore developed a portable device that quickly returns a person’s vital health indicators in an ambulance, at an outpatient clinic, or even at home. Test results of the device, called MouthLab, led by biomedical engineering and of otolaryngology professor Gene Fridman, appear in the September…
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Small Business Grant Funds Preclinical Lupus Research
24 August 2015. A grant from National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases is funding preclinical research by a biotechnology company on stem cells as a therapy for a type of lupus. The $225,000 grant from NIAID, part of National Institutes of Health, is made to Ocata Therapeutics Inc. of Marlborough, Massachusetts under the institute’s…
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Cancer Precision Medicine Trial Underway
18 August 2015. A new clinical trial is enrolling participants that tests multiple types of therapies on a number of different cancers based on the genomic make-up of individual patients. The intermediate-stage trial is part of the National Cancer Institute’s Molecular Analysis for Therapy Choice, or NCI-MATCH program. NCI-MATCH seeks to determine if tumors with…
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Wireless Light-Activated Circuit Connects to Mice Neurons
17 August 2015. Engineers at Stanford University designed a wireless circuit implanted under the skin for sending light-activated signals to nerve cells in lab mice. The team led by electrical engineering professor Ada Poon published its findings in today’s issue of the journal Nature Methods (paid subscription required). Poon and colleagues are seeking a simple,…
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Oilseed Plant Engineered for Biofuel, Chemical Feedstocks
14 August 2015. A biochemistry lab at Kansas State University genetically engineered camelina oilseed plants to make them better feedstocks for biofuels and chemicals. The team led by Kansas State professor Timothy Durrett published its findings in the August issue of the journal Plant Biotechnology Journal (paid subscription required). Durrett, with colleagues from University of…
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Inside Air Monitor Devised as Smartphone Add-On
13 August 2015. Engineers in Finland designed a miniaturized system for measuring levels of carbon dioxide and other gases with smartphones to monitor interior air quality for health care needs. The team at VTT Technical Research Centre, an applied research institute in Finland, developed the monitor as an add-on to mobile devices, with a spin-off…
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Genetic Test Found to Save Drug Expense, Boost Adherence
13 August 2015. A genetic test to guide the choice of drugs prescribed to patients with psychiatric disorders was found to reduce the cost of medications to those patients and improve adherence to the drugs prescribed, compared to patients who were not given the test. Results of the study evaluating the GeneSight test, made by…