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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.

 

 

Sangeeta Bhatia Awarded Lemelson-mit Prize

Sangeeta Bhatia | Via Broad Institute | September 8, 2014

Broad senior associate member Sangeeta Bhatia has been named the 2014 recipient of the $500,000 Lemelson-MIT Prize. The honor, which is celebrating its 20th year, recognizes outstanding, mid-career inventors who are improving the world through technological invention, and demonstrating a commitment to mentorship in science, technology, engineering, and mathematics. Bhatia, a biomedical engineer and MIT […]

Pitt Faculty Members Awarded Distinguished Professorships

Clifford Brubaker | Via Pitt Chronicle | September 8, 2014

The Provost’s Office recently announced that nine Pitt faculty members have been appointed as Distinguished Professors, a distinction that affirms extraordinary, internationally recognized scholarly attainment in a discipline or field. Another four faculty members were named Distinguished Service Professors, a title that recognizes distinctive contributions and outstanding service (e.g., professional, regional, national, international) to the University […]

Dr. Annette Guiseppi-Elie named to USEPA’s Board of Scientific Councilors Chemical and Safety for Sustainability Subcommittee

Annette Guiseppi-Elie | Via EPA | September 1, 2014

Dr. Annette Guiseppi-Elie, Principal Consultant for Risk Assessment within the DuPont Engineering Corporate Remediation Group has been named to The Board of Scientific Councilors (BOSC) Chemical Safety for Sustainability Subcommittee of the US Environmental and Protection Agency (US EPA). Dr. Guiseppi-Elie will serve a three year term, from 2014 – 2017, as a member of […]

New Non-invasive Technique Controls the Size of Molecules Penetrating the Blood-brain Barrier

Elisa Konofagou | Via MDT | August 26, 2014

A new technique developed by Elisa Konofagou, professor of biomedical engineering and radiology at Columbia Engineering, has demonstrated for the first time that the size of molecules penetrating the blood-brain barrier (BBB) can be controlled using acoustic pressure—the pressure of an ultrasound beam—to let specific molecules through. The study was published in the July issue of the Journal of […]

Graduate Researchers Mentor High School Students in Drug Delivery Experiments

Nicholas Peppas | Via U. Texas at Austin | August 25, 2014

Five science-minded high school students were mentored by chemical engineering and biomedical engineering graduate students this summer to learn about oral drug delivery research in a university lab setting. Sofia Kennedy a senior at Liberal Arts and Science Academy in Austin and Kevin Lee, Frank Muehleman, Sam Norwood, and John Sullivan, all students at St. […]

Mahadevan-jansen Elected Chair of Gordon Research Conference

Anita Mahadevan-Jansen | Via Vanderbilt | August 25, 2014

Anita Mahadevan-Jansen, Orrin H. Ingram Professor of Biomedical Engineering, has been elected chair of the Gordon Research Conference in Lasers in Medicine and Biology. For more than 75 years, the Gordon Conferences have been recognized as some of the world’s premier scientific conferences, where leading investigators from around the world discuss their latest work in an […]

Frozen Yogurt in a Shell, No Packaging Required

David Edwards | Via Fast Company | August 22, 2014

For years, Harvard University professor David Edwards has worked to create edible food packaging designed to mimic the way nature creates fruit and vegetables inside edible skins. One of his creations, the WikiPearl, is now available for public consumption. In 2012, Edwards turned his passion into a company, called WikiFoods. One of his nature-inspired food […]

Kenneth Foster Debunks Wifi Fears

Kenneth Foster | Via Network World | August 21, 2014

What would it take to get you to not use Wi-Fi? I don’t mean simply not connecting to it; I mean not having Wi-Fi switched on. At all. And what about cellphones? I know that the issue of cellphone safety has come and gone and most authorities have dismissed the risks as negligible. But what […]

New Joint Lubrication Technique Could Aid Arthritis Treatment

Jennifer Elisseeff | Via Arthritis Research UK | August 20, 2014

Scientists in the US have developed a new means of improving the lubrication of arthritic joints by mimicking one of the body’s natural functions. Researchers at Johns Hopkins University have been able to bind a molecule naturally found in the fluid surrounding healthy joints, making it possible to create surfaces that can deliver long-lasting lubrication […]

To Take on New York, Accelerator Makes Big Changes

Leroy Hood | Via Xconomy | August 14, 2014

Talk to anyone involved in the New York biotech ecosystem, and it’s clear what’s missing: startups. The big city is just too expensive, entrepreneurs and their backers say—just try finding an affordable one bedroom apartment in Manhattan, let alone lab space—so a number of promising biotech ideas either stay untapped or get snatched up by […]

Georgiou Named Top 20 Translational Researcher

George Georgiou | Via University of Texas at Autin | August 14, 2014

Nature Biotechnology ranked George Georgiou, a professor in the Cockrell School of Engineering, one of the world’s top 20 translational researchers in 2013. Georgiou, a renowned biomedical engineer and molecular biologist, is a leading authority in the discovery, development and manufacturing of protein therapeutics. Nature Biotechnology recognized Georgiou for his output of U.S. and European patents issued and papers […]

Jack Lemons 2014 Recipient of the Sam Brown Bridge Builder Award

Jack Lemons | Via University of Alabama at Birmingham | August 13, 2014

Jack Lemons, Ph.D., professor in the University of Alabama at Birmingham School of Dentistry Division of Biomaterials, is the recipient of the 2014 Sam Brown Bridge Builder Award. This annual award honors individuals who engage in interdisciplinary, collaborative efforts across campus in ways that embody the vision, character and bridge-building talents vital to the future […]

Life-saving Dividends for Synthetic Biology Research: Microbial-based Antimalarial Drug Shipped to Africa

Jay Keasling | Via Berkeley Lab | August 13, 2014

A project begun some 13 years ago by Jay Keasling, the Associate Laboratory Director for Biosciences at Berkeley Lab and the CEO of the Joint BioEnergy Institute (JBEI), was culminated with an announcement on August 12 from the partnership of Sanofi, the multinational pharmaceutical company, and PATH, the nonprofit global health organization. Sanofi/PATH announced the […]

Drug Delivery System Prevents Transplant Rejection

Jeffrey Karp | Via Harvard Gazette | August 13, 2014

Following a tissue graft transplant — such as that of the face, hand, arm, or leg — it is standard for doctors to give transplant recipients immunosuppressant drugs immediately to prevent their immune systems from rejecting and attacking the new body part. However, that incurs the risk of toxicities and side effects, because suppressing the […]

Scientists Create a 3-D Model That Mimics Brain Function

David Kaplan | Via NY Times | August 11, 2014

A doughnut created in a lab and made of silk on the outside and collagen gel where the jelly ought to be can mimic a basic function of brain tissue, scientists have found. Bioengineers produced a kind of rudimentary gray matter and white matter in a dish, along with rat neurons that signaled one another […]

Dudley Childress, Rehabilitation Engineering Pioneer, Passes Away

Dudley Childress | Via Northwestern Engineering | August 8, 2014

Dudley Childress, one of the first graduates of the biomedical engineering PhD program at the McCormick School of Engineering who went on to conduct important work in rehabilitation engineering, passed away Aug. 6 after a long illness.  Childress’s pioneering work led him to be elected in 1995 as a member of the Institute of Medicine […]

Seas Summer Scholars Research Blood Vessel Cells, Cytoskeleton

Sina Rabbany | Via Hofstra University | August 6, 2014

This summer, Dr. Sina Rabbany, Hofstra’s Jean Nerken Professor of Engineering and Director of the Bioengineering Program, is working with a talented group of students from varied age groups and educational backgrounds to continue research on examining the role of biomechanical forces on endothelial cells (EC) – the cells that make up the structure of […]

Rena Bizios Receives Highest Honors in Her Field

Rena Bizios | Via UT at San Antonio | August 6, 2014

Rena Bizios, a Peter T. Flawn Professor in the UTSA Department of Biomedical Engineering, recently received two prestigious awards for her life-long contributions to the biomaterials field and to biomedical engineering education. The first, the 2014 Founders Award of the Society for Biomaterials, is the highest recognition for life contributions by a leading scientist/engineer in […]

Laser-guided Brain Surgery Technology Goes Global

Gerard Cote | Via Texas A&M Engineering | August 5, 2014

An MRI-guided laser system that allows surgeons to perform brain surgery on tumors and epileptic lesions in the brain is expected to become widely available to patients in need now that the technology has been acquired from Visualase Inc. by the global medical device company Medtronic, Inc., says a biomedical engineering professor from Texas A&M […]

Milan Mrksich Testifies on Nanotechnology Before Congress

Milan Mrksich | Via Northwestern McCormick Engineering | August 5, 2014

Northwestern University faculty member Milan Mrksich was on Capitol Hill last week testifying before Congress on issues critical to keeping the country scientifically competitive.  Mrksich testified before the US House Committee on Energy and Commerce’s Subcommittee on Commerce, Manufacturing and Trade, discussing sustained investment in fundamental nanoscience research, the economic opportunities of nanotechnology, and the […]