Life Sciences

HEADLINES ARCHIVE

  • Allrounder 520 A: Highly innovative IML application for medical technology

    In-mold labeling (IML) for centrifuge tubes creates added value for pharmaceutical and clean room operations.

  • Inexpensive device uses smartphone to monitor blood pressure

    Blood pressure is an important indicator of cardiovascular health and this has motivated University of California in San Diego researchers to develop a low-cost, simple clip that utilizes a smartphone’s camera to measure and track blood pressure from the user's fingertip.

  • Sensory feedback in next-gen prosthetics

    In recent years, sensory feedback in prosthetics has garnered considerable attention. A surge in research has presented both invasive and non-invasive solutions, reflecting the heightened interest from prosthetic manufacturing entities.

  • AI model estimates a subject’s true age according to their chest X-ray

    Establishing a link between age and chronic medical conditions, the AI model can reportedly calculate a person’s age accurately according to the appearance of their chest X-rays.

  • Predicting COVID cases by combining wastewater data with AI

    Hospital admission rates of COVID-19 cases can be predicted up to four weeks in advance using a wastewater-based epidemiology approach to artificial intelligence (AI) modeling.

  • Rutgers' team creates efficient spray technique for bioactive materials

    Potentially paving the way for transdermal medication delivery — for instance, in the form of shot-free vaccinations — the team has devised a new approach to electrospray deposition, which is an industrial spray-coating process.

  • Device quickly detects osteoporosis in a drop of blood

    A biosensor was engineered to help identify those most at risk for osteoporosis using less than a drop of blood.

  • New centrifuge product line introduced by Boekel

    Boekel Scientific has introduced a new product line that consists of four families of centrifuges: economy, general purpose, STAT and Blood Bank.

  • Video: Spectrometer designed to speed protein discovery

    The platform combines three mass analyzers to yield new insights into biology and disease mechanisms.

  • See a flexible battery for smart contact lenses

    An ultrathin flexible battery developed to power smart contact lenses stores electricity when immersed in saline solution.

  • The pros and cons of telemedicine

    Technological advances have made telehealth a simplified process whereby any internet connected device can be used to facilitate most accepted forms of telemedicine which include non-emergency clinical services, administrative support, communications and continued training.

  • Team turns LEGO robot into gradient mixer

    To lower the cost of developing such expensive equipment, the ASU team reportedly built a mixer using off-the-shelf LEGO kits.

  • New AI system to alert us of next pandemic

    The so-called early warning anomaly detection (EWAD) system reportedly uses machine learning to analyze virus variants’ genetic sequences, frequencies and mortality rates amid their spread across the world.

  • UK team to treat mouth lesions with adhesive patch

    The goal, according to the researchers, is to develop a patch that will stay in the mouth and deliver medications to the affected areas within the wearer’s mouth.

  • Johns Hopkins creates nanoscale tattoos for tracking the health of individual cells

    This new technology will enable the placement of electronics on live cells via tattoo-like arrays that cling to the cells’ wet and fluid outer structure — even as the cells move — for roughly 16 hours.

  • These robot medics to go where doctors cannot

    Using medical telexistence (MediTel) technology, the robot features two robotic arms and virtual reality (VR) systems that can remotely operate medical tools for assessing the condition of a casualty within 20 minutes.

  • Arizona State introduces its sweaty bot

    The humanoid robot, dubbed the Advanced Newton Dynamic Instrument, is an outdoor thermal mannequin that can be used to measure how much heat it receives from the environment, and thus how a person might respond to such conditions.

  • Autosampler benefits bioreactor research

    The autosampler facilitates sampling 24/7 in short and regular intervals so as to secure complete datasets and reduce the risk for human error.

  • Agilent designs new washer dispenser for technology-driven workflow efficiency

    The platform incorporates expanded liquid handling features designed for integration into automated systems and standalone benchtop use.

  • Drug-testing robot to expedite the speed of sample testing

    The portable robot could be easily deployed at music festivals, for instance, where users can walk up to a kiosk and drop off a sample and the machine will reportedly identify substances in roughly 15 minutes.

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