Tag: NIH

  • Device Measuring Nerves on Heart Rhythm in Development

    22 July 2016. A spin-off enterprise from Indiana University is creating a device to measure sympathetic nerve activity — the fight-or-flight response — in people with heart rhythm disorders. Research and development of a prototype device, by Arrhythmotech LLC in Indianapolis, is funded by a new 2-year, $1.47 million grant from National Institute of Drug…

  • Refillable HIV Prevention Implant in Development

    A device implanted under the skin providing 60 days of antiretroviral drugs to prevent HIV infection is in development at Houston Methodist Research Institute.

  • Small Business Grant Funds R&D on New Antibiotics

    A spin-off company from University of Utah received funding to develop a new antibiotic that targets the genetics of bacteria becoming resistant to antibiotics.

  • Biomaterials Solutions Studied for Chronic Wounds

    3 June 2016. A team of materials and medical scientists is investigating a new process of applying protein-based biomaterials to the healing of chronic wounds. The research led by materials scientists Millicent Sullivan and Kristi Kiick at University of Delaware in Newark is funded by a 4 year, $1.4 million grant from National Institute of…

  • Start-Up Licenses Genetics Technology for HIV Diagnostics

    19 May 2016. A spin-off company from Harvard University is licensing genetics research to develop more powerful tools to detect drug-resistant strains of HIV. Financial details of the agreement between the 2 year-old Aldatu Biosciences Inc. and Harvard were not disclosed. Aldatu Biosciences is the creation of pathologist Iain MacLeod and geneticist David Raiser that…

  • Vaccine Shown to Give 1-Year Malaria Protection

    10 May 2016. An early-stage clinical trial with healthy volunteers shows an experimental vaccine can protect against malaria infection for as long as 1 year. Results of the trial, conducted by National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases, or NIAID, part of National Institutes of Health, and University of Maryland Medical Center in Baltimore, appear…

  • NIH Closes Two Clinical Facilities for Sterility Issues

    20 April 2016. National Institutes of Health closed two of its clinical facilities found not in compliance with safety and quality standards that could put patients at risk. Facilities at NIH closed for not meeting Current Good Manufacturing Practice standards are a cell therapy production lab at National Cancer Institute and a production center for…

  • NIH Funds Biosensors to Monitor Oxygen in Tissue

    11 April 2016. Profusa Inc., a company designing sensors that measure tissue oxygen levels in individuals with peripheral artery disease, received an NIH grant to advance its technology. The $225,000 Small Business Innovation Research grant for 2016 is divided between two agencies of National Institutes of Health: National Center for Advancing Translational Sciences and National…

  • Study to Test Increasing Ethnic Genetic Disease Diversity

    5 April 2016. The personal genetics company 23andMe is beginning a study to test techniques for increasing the diversity of disease-causing genetic variations, which now overwhelmingly favor Europeans. The study is funded by a $260,000 Small Business Innovation Research grant from National Institutes of Health. The study aims to provide better tools for genetics researchers…

  • Crowdsourcing Yields Heart Disease Algorithm

    30 March 2016. Two financial analysts are the winners of a data science competition to write an algorithm that quickly analyzes MRI images of a person’s heart suspected of cardiac disease. The winning algorithm, by Qi Liu and Tencia Lee, was submitted in the second Data Science Bowl, put on by consulting company Booz-Allen Hamilton…