#biomedical-engineering

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Snowboarding
fromUnofficial Networks
1 month ago

Can Cartilage Actually Grow Back? New Research Offers Hope For Skiers With Bad Knees

Researchers are developing injectable scaffolds and enzyme-blocking treatments that regenerate cartilage in animal models, though human trials remain pending.
fromCornell Chronicle
6 months ago

Cornell launches initiative to unravel the science of menopause | Cornell Chronicle

Two centuries ago, few women lived long enough to reach menopause. Today, it marks a major inflection point in women's health, yet remains poorly understood. Cornell researchers aim to change that. Drawing on cutting-edge technology and interdisciplinary expertise, researchers are launching Menopause Health Engineering, a new initiative uniting faculty from Cornell's Ithaca campus and Weill Cornell Medicine, to uncover how menopause shapes health and disease, and to develop urgently needed treatment strategies.
Medicine
Cancer
fromNature
10 months ago

A cancer-causing mutation meets its match

Engineered immune cells effectively shrink tumors by targeting mutant KRAS protein.
These findings may revolutionize cancer treatment for pancreatic, lung, and kidney cancers.
#wearable-technology
Wearables
fromNews Center
1 year ago

New Wearable Device is the First to Gauge Health by Sensing Gases Through Skin - News Center

A new wearable device measures skin-emitted gases, providing insights into skin health and overall physiological conditions.
fromNew York Post
1 year ago
Wearables

How a new wearable sensor can track your health - without even touching your skin

A contactless wearable device by Northwestern can monitor health through skin-emitted gases, enhancing clinical care for vulnerable populations.
Wearables
fromNews Center
1 year ago

New Wearable Device is the First to Gauge Health by Sensing Gases Through Skin - News Center

A new wearable device measures skin-emitted gases, providing insights into skin health and overall physiological conditions.
Wearables
fromNew York Post
1 year ago

How a new wearable sensor can track your health - without even touching your skin

A contactless wearable device by Northwestern can monitor health through skin-emitted gases, enhancing clinical care for vulnerable populations.
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