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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.

 

 

Vortex-Focusing Microfluidics Yields Precisely Sized Liposomes at Scale

Don DeVoe | Via genengnews | March 15, 2023

When synthesizing nanoscale liposomes, the ability to control vesicle size helps define their pharmaceutical properties. Conventional microfluidic liposome synthesis methods, however, are limited in terms of the sizes they can produce and the consistency of those sizes. A new microfluidic vortex-focusing technique resolves those challenges, generating liposomes at precise sizes with negligible size variance. The […]

Python-based compiler achieves orders-of-magnitude speedups

Bonnie Berger | Via MIT | March 14, 2023

Codon compiles Python code to run more efficiently and effectively while allowing for customization and adaptation to various domains. In 2018, the Economist published an in-depth piece on the programming language Python. “In the past 12 months,” the article said, “Google users in America have searched for Python more often than for Kim Kardashian.” Reality […]

Nanofiber-Hydrogel Shows Success Treating Severe Complication of Crohn’s Disease

Hai-Quan Mao | Via SciTechDaily | March 13, 2023

Researchers from Johns Hopkins have developed an injectable biomimetic hydrogel composite that promotes regenerative healing in an animal model of Crohn’s perianal fistulas. A recent study using a rat model for Crohn’s disease has demonstrated promising results for the treatment of perianal fistulas (PAF), a common complication of the condition. Researchers from Johns Hopkins Medicine […]

City of Hope scientists reveal how XBP1s interacts with IL-15 to enhance the survival of natural killer cells

Michael Caligiuri | Via City of Hope | March 13, 2023

A new study published in Science Immunology points to a promising therapeutic approach for future cancer treatments based on natural killer cells (NK), which are immune cells that bind to tumor cells and destroy them. City of Hope scientists created a knockout mouse model for a protein called XBP1s to explore the molecule’s effect on […]

‘Groundbreaking’ Soil Sensors From UT Dallas Bioengineers Could Help Combat Climate Change, Food Insecurity

Shalini Prasad | Via Dallas Innovates | March 9, 2023

“This is the equivalent of having a wearable health sensor on your body that tells you in real time what’s happening. Think of it as a wearable for the soil,” Dr. Shalini Prasad said. Soil quality isn’t just a concern for farmers and policymakers—it also matters on a personal level. The health of our soil […]

AI Model Provides Insights into Long-Term Traumatic Brain Injury Risk

Ellen Kuhl | Via TechTarget | March 7, 2023

A new AI model may signal a ‘paradigm shift’ in traumatic brain injury research by more accurately modeling the tissue deformations that lead to brain damage. Stanford University researchers are leveraging artificial intelligence (AI) to help identify which computational models perform best at modeling mechanical stress on the brain, which may help drive insights into […]

UT Southwestern study: Cell membrane ‘blebs’ could hold new targets for anti-cancer drugs

Gaudenz Danuser | Via UT Southwestern Medical Center | March 3, 2023

Cell membrane protrusions called blebs that typically signify the end of life for healthy cells do the opposite for melanoma cells, activating processes in these cells that help them to survive and spread, a UT Southwestern study suggests. The findings, published in Nature, could lead to new ways to fight melanoma and potentially a broad […]

Getting Drugs Across the Blood-Brain Barrier Using Nanoparticles

Daniel Heller | Via Memorial Sloan Kettering Cancer Center | March 2, 2023

Brain tumors are notoriously hard to treat. One reason is the challenge posed by the blood-brain barrier, a network of blood vessels and tissue with closely spaced cells. The barrier forms a tight seal to protect the brain from harmful substances, but it also prevents most drugs from getting to brain tissue. This severely limits […]

Biologists, chemical engineers collaborate to reveal complex cellular process inside petunias

John Morgan | Via Purdue University | March 2, 2023

Once upon a time, prevailing scientific opinion might have pronounced recently published research in Nature Communications by a team of Purdue University scientists as unneeded. Now, climate change implications have heightened the need for this line of research. Flowers emit scent chemicals called volatile organic compounds (VOCs). Earlier this year, the Purdue team published the […]

Yale Team Co-maps Proteins and Transcriptome in Human Tissues

Rong Fan | Via Yale University | March 2, 2023

To understand how cells behave, researchers also need to understand the molecules that make them work. “If someone wants to know how the kidney functions, they have to know what’s going on inside the kidney cells,” says Yang Liu, PhD, assistant professor of pathology. “This is defined by the protein activity.” But most spatial transcriptome […]

Hansel and Gretel’s breadcrumb trick inspires robotic exploration of caves on Mars and beyond

Wolfgang Fink | Via University of Arizona | March 1, 2023

University of Arizona engineers have developed a system that allows autonomous vehicles to scout out underground habitats for astronauts. House hunting on Mars could soon become a thing, and researchers at the University of Arizona are already in the business of scouting real estate that future astronauts could use as habitats. Researchers in the UArizona […]

Wavefront Shaping: From Telescopes to Biological Tissue

Lihong Wang | Via Caltech | February 24, 2023

Researchers in Caltech’s Andrew and Peggy Cherng Department of Medical Engineering have made a major step forward in medical imaging by taking inspiration from the field of astronomy. The paper describing this research was published in Nature Photonics on January 23 and is titled “High-gain and high-speed wavefront shaping through scattering media.” In astronomy, the […]

First Transient Electronic Bandage Speeds Healing by 30 Percent

Guillermo Ameer | Via Northwestern University | February 22, 2023

Bandage also monitors the healing process, alerting clinicians to issues in real time  Northwestern Engineering researchers have developed a first-of-its-kind small, flexible, stretchable bandage that accelerates healing by delivering electrotherapy directly to the wound site. In an animal study, the new bandage healed diabetic ulcers 30 percent faster than in mice without the bandage. […]

Spinal Stimulation Opens Door to Treating Stroke Survivors With Partial Paralysis

Douglas Weber | Via Medpage Today | February 21, 2023

With epidural electrical stimulation (EES) of the cervical spine, researchers successfully improved arm and hand mobility in two stroke patients who otherwise had no treatment available for their chronic hemiparesis. Continuous spinal cord stimulation (SCS), provided through two surgically implanted leads, improved strength, speed, and functional movements in the first two patients of this ongoing […]

Heidi Mansour Elected to National Academy of Inventors’ 2023 Class of Senior Members

Heidi Mansour | Via NAI | February 20, 2023

NAI Welcomes 95 New Emerging Innovators The National Academy of Inventors (NAI) welcomes 95 of the foremost emerging academic inventors identified from NAI’s Member Institutions to their 2023 class of Senior Members. NAI Senior Members are active faculty, scientists, and administrators from NAI Member Institutions who have demonstrated remarkable innovation producing technologies that have brought, […]

Roger Kamm elected to the National Academy of Engineering for 2023

Roger Kamm | Via MIT | February 14, 2023

Seven MIT researchers are among the 106 new members and 18 international members elected to the National Academy of Engineering (NAE) this week. Fourteen additional MIT alumni, including one member of the MIT Corporation, were also elected as new members. One of the highest professional distinctions for engineers, membership to the NAE is given to […]

Markus Buehler elected to the National Academy of Engineering for 2023

Markus Buehler | Via MIT | February 14, 2023

Seven MIT researchers are among the 106 new members and 18 international members elected to the National Academy of Engineering (NAE) this week. Fourteen additional MIT alumni, including one member of the MIT Corporation, were also elected as new members. One of the highest professional distinctions for engineers, membership to the NAE is given to […]

Melody Swartz Elected to National Academy of Engineering

Melody Swartz | Via University of Chicago | February 9, 2023

Melody Swartz, William B. Ogden Professor at the University of Chicago’s Pritzker School of Molecular Engineering (PME), has been elected to the National Academy of Engineering (NAE) for her research into lymphatic transport and immunobiology, informing novel approaches for cancer immunotherapy and vaccination. Election to the National Academy of Engineering is among the highest professional […]

National Academy of Engineering adds 3 Buckeyes

Judit Puskas | Via Ohio State University | February 9, 2023

Election recognizes outstanding contributions to engineering research, practice or education Two Ohio State University professors and a recently retired faculty member have been elected to the National Academy of Engineering (NAE) Class of 2023 in recognition of sustained excellence in innovation and education. Alan Luo, Judit E. Puskas and Longya Xu are among 124 new […]

Disrupted flow of brain fluid may underlie neurodevelopmental disorders

Samuel Achilefu | Via Washington University in St. Louis | February 9, 2023

The brain floats in a sea of fluid that cushions it against injury, supplies it with nutrients and carries away waste. Disruptions to the normal ebb and flow of the fluid have been linked to neurological conditions including Alzheimer’s disease and hydrocephalus, a disorder involving excess fluid around the brain. Researchers at Washington University School […]