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Elizabeth Cosgriff-Hernandez, Ph.D.

AIMBE College of Fellows Class of 2017
For outstanding contributions to biomaterial and tissue engineering research in the areas of biodegradation characterization, biomaterial development, and scaffold fabrication.

Injectable electrodes could prevent deadly heart arrhythmias

Via AAAS | March 25, 2022

Heart attacks and strokes triggered by electrical misfiring in the heart are among the biggest killers on the planet. Now, researchers have created a “liquid wire” that, when injected into pig hearts, can guide the organs to a normal rhythm.

The results, presented here this week at a meeting of the American Chemical Society, are “impressive and really cool,” says Thomas Mansell, a biomolecular engineer at Iowa State University who was not involved with the work. “It’s an exciting study,” agrees Usha Tedrow, a cardiac electrophysiologist at Harvard Medical School, also not involved in the work. If the findings translate to people, she says, it could save thousands of lives each year… Continue reading.

Elizabeth Cosgriff-Hernandez, Ph.D. To be Inducted into Medical and Biological Engineering Elite

Via AIMBE | March 1, 2017

WASHINGTON, D.C.— The American Institute for Medical and Biological Engineering (AIMBE) has announced the pending induction of Elizabeth Cosgriff-Hernandez, Ph.D., Associate Professor, Biomedical Engineering, Texas A&M University, to its College of Fellows. Dr. Cosgriff-Hernandez was nominated, reviewed, and elected by peers and members of the College of Fellows For outstanding contributions to biomaterial and tissue engineering research in the areas of biodegradation characterization, biomaterial development, and scaffold fabrication..