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Fellowbook News

AIMBE Fellowbook collects news stories highlighting the members of the AIMBE College of Fellows. Read the latest stories, jump to the College Directory, or search below to find the newest research, awards, announcements and more for the leaders of the medical and biological engineering community.

 

 

Nancy Allbritton elected to National Academy of Engineering

Nancy Allbritton | Via University of Washington | February 6, 2024

Nancy Allbritton, the dean of the University of Washington College of Engineering and a UW professor of bioengineering, has been elected to the National Academy of Engineering, the academy announced Feb. 6. Allbritton was selected “for innovation and commercialization of single-cell, analytical, and gut-on-chip technologies for drug screening and for engineering education.” Drawing from the […]

National Academy of Engineering Elects Gargi Maheshwari, Ph.D.

Gargi Maheshwari | Via National Academy of Engineering | February 6, 2024

National Academy of Engineering Elects 114 Members and 21 International Members The National Academy of Engineering (NAE) has elected 114 new members and 21 international members, announced NAE President John L. Anderson today. This brings the total U.S. membership to 2,310 and the number of international members to 332. Election to the National Academy of […]

National Academy of Engineering Elects Charles A. Taylor, Ph.D.

Charles Taylor | Via National Academy of Engineering | February 6, 2024

National Academy of Engineering Elects 114 Members and 21 International Members The National Academy of Engineering (NAE) has elected 114 new members and 21 international members, announced NAE President John L. Anderson today. This brings the total U.S. membership to 2,310 and the number of international members to 332. Election to the National Academy of […]

Blood Cancer Discovery IDs High-Risk Patients, Could Improve Outcomes

Kevin Janes | Via University of Virginia | February 5, 2024

University of Virginia Cancer Center researchers have developed a new way to identify high-risk patients with acute myeloid leukemia, which could one day lead to more tailored treatments and improved patient outcomes for patients with the blood cancer. Acute myeloid leukemia (AML) is one of the most common leukemias, or blood cancers, in adults. It […]

3D brain mapping opens a window to the aging brain

John Gore | Via Vanderbilt University Medical Center | January 30, 2024

By mapping brain activity in three dimensions, researchers at Vanderbilt University Medical Center have achieved a more detailed picture of how the brain changes with age. Their findings, described in the Jan. 26 issue of the journal Science Advances, may help advance the understanding, early diagnosis and treatment of Alzheimer’s disease, bipolar disorder and other […]

3D printed electronic skin provides promise for human-machine interaction

Akhilesh Gaharwar | Via Tech Xplore | January 26, 2024

With more than 1,000 nerve endings, human skin is the brain’s largest sensory connection to the outside world, providing a wealth of feedback through touch, temperature and pressure. While these complex features make skin a vital organ, they also make it a challenge to replicate. By utilizing nanoengineered hydrogels that exhibit tunable electronic and thermal […]

Cultivated meat production costs could fall significantly: Bovine muscle engineered to produce their own growth signals

David Kaplan | Via Phys.org | January 26, 2024

Cellular agriculture—the production of meat from cells grown in bioreactors rather than harvested from farm animals—is taking leaps in technology that are making it a more viable option for the food industry. One such leap has now been made at the Tufts University Center for Cellular Agriculture (TUCCA), led by David Kaplan, Stern Family Professor […]

Cancer Mutation That Spurs Cell Division Helps Heart Models Run at Full Gallop

Nenad Bursac | Via Genetic Engineering & Biotechnology News | January 25, 2024

A broken heart will mend over time. However, this isn’t the case for heart tissue following a heart attack. While skin and many other tissues of the body retain the ability to repair themselves after injury, the heart lacks this ability. Heart cells rapidly divide during embryonic and fetal development to form cardiac tissue and […]

AI Harnesses Tumor Genetics to Predict Treatment Response

Trey Ideker | Via UC San Diego | January 18, 2024

In a groundbreaking study published on January 18, 2024, in Cancer Discovery, scientists at University of California San Diego School of Medicine leveraged a machine learning algorithm to tackle one of the biggest challenges facing cancer researchers: predicting when cancer will resist chemotherapy. All cells, including cancer cells, rely on complex molecular machinery to replicate […]

Robotic Garment Improves Stride in Patient With Parkinson’s Disease

Conor Walsh | Via Medscape | January 18, 2024

A wearable, soft, robotic device could help patients with Parkinson’s disease (PD) walk without experiencing freezing of gait (FoG), early research suggested. The robotic apparel, worn around the hips and thighs, gently pushes the hips as the leg swings, facilitating a longer stride and preventing FoG, a common disorder in PD that affects nearly all […]

Metastatic breast cancer treatments have aided decline in deaths, Stanford Medicine-led study finds

Sylvia Plevritis | Via Stanford University | January 17, 2024

Deaths from breast cancer dropped 58% between 1975 and 2019 due to a combination of screening mammography and improvements in treatment, according to a new multicenter study led by Stanford Medicine clinicians and biomedical data scientists. Nearly one-third of the decrease (29%) is due to advances in treating metastatic breast cancer —a form that has […]

Potential treatment relieves symptoms and reduces cancerous colon tumors in animal models, UTSW researchers demonstrate

Andrew Wang | Via UT Southwestern Medical Center | January 16, 2024

By taking advantage of mechanisms that allow cancer cells to evade immune attack, UT Southwestern Medical Center researchers have developed a new strategy in animal models that has potential for treating ulcerative colitis. Their findings, reported in Nature Biomedical Engineering, could eventually provide relief to millions of people worldwide who have this or other autoimmune […]

Brain imaging method may aid mild traumatic brain injury diagnosis

Samir Mitragotri | Via Parkinsons News Today | January 16, 2024

A new brain imaging method may help diagnose mild traumatic brain injury (mTBI), which according to some studies can be associated with a 50% higher risk of developing Parkinson’s. Available methods, like magnetic resonance imaging (MRI), leave most cases of mTBI, or concussions, undiagnosed. They occur when a physical injury such as a violent blow […]

Expert urges adoption of biotech innovations for poverty alleviation

Thomas Webster | Via Ashe News | January 11, 2024

Expert urges adoption of biotech innovations for poverty alleviation The Director of Biotechnology, Precious Cornerstone University, Ibadan, Prof. Charles Adetunji says biotechnology innovations can help in alleviating poverty and creating impact in the community. Adetunji disclosed this in a telephone interview on Wednesday in Abuja. He said that adoption of biotechnology innovations would also provide […]

City of Hope Research Reveals an Immune Cell That Can Attack Cancer

Michael Caligiuri | Via Business Wire | January 10, 2024

Preclinical findings reported in the journal Cell could lead to a new type of immunotherapy According to preclinical research published online today in Cell, one of the world’s premier scientific journals, researchers with City of Hope®, one of the largest cancer treatment and research organizations in the United States, have discovered that a type of […]

Opinion: Do universities help or hurt innovation?

Tom Webster | Via Open Access Government | January 10, 2024

Do Universities help or hurt innovation? Find out in this 25-year academic entrepreneur’s anecdotal perspective of starting companies and developing implants. Thomas J. Webster shares his opinion here Top research U.S. Universities and others worldwide, sometimes along with respective government funding agencies (like the NSF and the NIH in the U.S.), have spent billions of […]

Injectable hydrogel electrodes open door to a novel painless treatment regimen for arrhythmia

Elizabeth Cosgriff-Hernandez | Via Science Daily | January 9, 2024

A breakthrough study led by Dr. Mehdi Razavi at The Texas Heart Institute (THI), in collaboration with a biomedical engineering team of The University of Texas at Austin (UT Austin) Cockrell School of Engineering led by Dr. Elizabeth Cosgriff-Hernandez, sets the foundation of a ground-breaking treatment regimen for treating ventricular arrhythmia. Their study published in […]

Novel test holds promise for detecting Parkinson’s disease early

David Walt | Via EurekAlert | January 8, 2024

In the development of Parkinson’s disease (PD), the changes that will lead to neurodegeneration take place in the brain long before patients show any symptoms. But without a test that can detect these changes, it’s difficult to intervene early to more effectively slow disease progression. To address this need, researchers from the Brigham and Women’s […]

Inhalable sensors could enable early lung cancer detection

Sangeeta Bhatia | Via MIT | January 5, 2024

The diagnostic, which requires only a simple urine test to read the results, could make lung cancer screening more accessible worldwide. Using a new technology developed at MIT, diagnosing lung cancer could become as easy as inhaling nanoparticle sensors and then taking a urine test that reveals whether a tumor is present. The new diagnostic […]

Monoclonal Antibody HCP Challenges

Abraham Lenhoff | Via Genetic Engineering & Biotechnology News | December 27, 2023

One longstanding and ongoing challenge for bioprocessors is the removal of host-cell proteins (HCPs). “The entire HCP field has taken off in the last several years and numerous groups have contributed to it,” says Abraham Lenhoff, PhD, Allan P. Colburn Professor of Chemical Engineering in the department of chemical and biomolecular engineering at the University […]