Category: New products
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Lab-On-Chip Device Captures Circulating Tumor Cells
19 May 2015. Engineers and medical researchers designed a microchip that detects clusters of circulating tumor cells that break away from tumors and can spread cancer throughout the body. The team from a joint Harvard-MIT health sciences technology program and Massachusetts General Hospital in Boston published its findings yesterday in the journal Nature Methods (paid…
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Gene Editing Harnessed to ID Cancer Targets
12 May 2015. Researchers from Cold Spring Harbor Lab in New York developed a technique that reveals targets for leukemia drugs with an emerging gene editing technology. A team from the lab of geneticist Christopher Vakoc published its findings yesterday in the journal Nature Biotechnology (paid subscription required). Vakoc and colleagues study proteins regulating chromatin,…
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Clinical Trial Testing West Nile Vaccine
7 May 2015. A vaccine for West Nile virus, a seasonal infection spread by mosquitoes, is being tested for safety in an early stage clinical trial. The vaccine, code-named HydroVax-001, is being developed in the lab of microbiologist Mark Slifka at Oregon Health and Science University in Beaverton and commercialized by Najit Technologies Inc., a…
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New Company Founded to Develop Centimeter-Accurate GPS
Video: Centimeter-level GPS used in a virtual reality headset (University of Texas, Austin) 6 May 2015. An engineering lab at University of Texas in Austin designed a low-cost portable global positioning system with precision to a few centimeters, and started a company to take the technology to market. A team from UT-Austin’s Radionavigation Laboratory, led…
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Stem Cells Treat Vision Disorders in Animal Tests
4 May 2015. Tests with lab rats of a therapy for degenerating retinas in the eyes, show the treatments derived from human embryonic stem cells can restore visual functions. Results of the treatments, developed by Cell Cure Neurosciences Ltd., are scheduled to be reported today by a research team from Oregon Health and Science University…
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Robotic Exoskeleton Developed for Upper-Body Rehab
1 May 2015. A robotic device that helps recover upper-body functions for people with neurological or spinal injuries is being developed by engineers at University of Texas in Austin. Developers of the exoskeleton, called Harmony, plan clinical trials of the device later in 2015. Harmony is a project of UT-Austin’s Rehabilitation and Neuromuscular Robotics Laboratory…
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Phone Add-On Designed to Image DNA Molecules
30 April 2015. A bioengineering lab at University of California in Los Angeles is developing a smartphone attachment that can image and measure the length of DNA molecules. The team led by engineering professor Aydogan Ozcan is scheduled to describe the system on 14 May at the Conference on Lasers and Electro-Optics sponsored by the…
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Trial Shows Multiple Sclerosis Drug Improves Optic Nerves
15 April 2015. A clinical trial testing a new therapy for multiple sclerosis shows the drug improves the performance of optic nerves in patients with acute optic neuritis, a condition highly associated with multiple sclerosis. Researchers from the biotechnology company Biogen present their findings next week at the annual meeting of American Academy of Neurology…
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Smart Treadmill Adjusts to Running Speed Changes
14 April 2015. Researchers at Ohio State University designed an automated treadmill that adjusts to changes in running speed by users, thus making the experience more like running outdoors. Steven Devor, professor of kinesiology, with former graduate student Cory Scheadler (now on the faculty at Northern Kentucky University), describe tests of a prototype model of…
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Trial Testing App to Manage Diabetes, Foot Ulcers
14 April 2015. A clinical trial is getting under way testing a smartphone app to help people with diabetes manage their condition, and in particular assess chronic foot ulcers associated with diabetes. The application is the work of an information technology and biomedical engineering team at Worcester Polytechnic Institute in Massachusetts, that described the system…