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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.

 

 

Based on genes, nearly everyone is likely to have an atypical response to at least one drug

Russ Altman | Via Stanford University | January 4, 2021

Every drug, from morphine to ibuprofen, has a standard dose — a sort of one-size-fits all recommendation. But a new study suggests that when it comes to drug doses, “one size fits all” rarely applies. Stanford Medicine professor Russ Altman, MD, PhD, and a team of scientists found that almost everyone (99.5% of individuals) is […]

High-Throughput Mitochondria Transfer Device Developed

Eric Chiou | Via Genetic Engineering & Biotechnology News | December 31, 2020

Researchers from the UCLA Jonsson Comprehensive Cancer Center say have developed a simple, high-throughput method for transferring isolated mitochondria and their associated mitochondrial DNA into mammalian cells. This approach enables researchers to tailor a key genetic component of cells, to study and potentially treat debilitating diseases such as cancer, diabetes, and metabolic disorders. The team […]

Ameer Receives Clemson Award for Contributions to the Literature

Guillermo Ameer | Via Northwestern University | December 23, 2020

Northwestern Engineering’s Guillermo Ameer has been named the recipient of the 2021 Clemson Award for Contributions to the Literature from the Society for Biomaterials. The Clemson Award for Contributions to the Literature is given to someone who has made significant contributions to the literature on the science or technology of biomaterials. The importance of the […]

Wolfgang Fink Named VP of Prognostics and Health Management Society

Wolfgang Fink | Via University of Arizona | December 23, 2020

The Prognostics and Health Management Society has elected Wolfgang Fink, electrical and computer engineering and biomedical engineering professor and inaugural Edward & Maria Keonjian Endowed Chair in the College of Engineering, as the organization’s vice president. Founded in 2009, the PHM Society is a nonprofit dedicated to advancing the discipline of PHM, which draws from […]

Light flips genetic switch in bacteria inside transparent worms

Jeff Tabor | Via Rice University | December 22, 2020

Baylor College of Medicine researcher Meng Wang had already shown that bacteria that make a metabolite called colanic acid (CA) could extend the lifespan of worms in her lab by as much as 50%, but her collaboration with Rice University synthetic biologist Jeffrey Tabor is providing tools to answer the bigger question of how the […]

Promising clinical data for fenofibrate’s ability to prevent lung damage in COVID patients

Yaakov Nahmias | Via EurekAlert | December 22, 2020

In what has the potential to significantly change how Corona patients are being treated and the severity of the disease, research spearheaded at Jerusalem’s Hebrew University gathered early clinical evidence demonstrating the efficacy of an existing drug in treating COVID-19. The study was presented at the recent SPARK Conference on Generic Drug Repurposing for COVID-19 […]

Artificial Intelligence Advances Showcased at the Virtual 2020 AACC Annual Scientific Meeting Could Help to Integrate This Technology Into Everyday Healthcare

Ulysses Balis | Via PR Newswire | December 13, 2020

Artificial intelligence (AI) has the potential to revolutionize healthcare, but integrating AI-based techniques into routine medical practice has proven to be a significant challenge. A plenary session at the virtual 2020 AACC Annual Scientific Meeting & Clinical Lab Expo will explore how one clinical lab overcame this challenge to implement a machine learning-based test, while […]

Small molecule restores muscle strength, boosts endurance in old mice, study finds

Helen Blau | Via Stanford University | December 10, 2020

Blocking the activity of a single protein in old mice for one month restores mass and strength to the animals’ withered muscles and helps them run longer on a treadmill, according to a study by researchers at the Stanford University School of Medicine. Conversely, increasing the expression of the protein in young mice causes their […]

Coronavirus likely infects upper airway cells first; blood pressure drugs unlikely to increase risk

Garry Nolan | Via Stanford Medicine | December 7, 2020

Cells in the nasal passages and upper airways are likely the coronavirus’ major point of entry into the body, according to a study by Stanford Medicine researchers. The finding further supports the use of masks to prevent viral spread and suggests that nasal sprays or rinses might be effective in blocking infection by the coronavirus. […]

New method uses artificial intelligence to study live cells

Gabriel Popescu | Via UIUC | December 7, 2020

Researchers at the University of Illinois Urbana Champaign have developed a new technique that combines label-free imaging with artificial intelligence to visualize unlabeled live cells over a prolonged time. This technique has potential applications in studying cell viability and pathology. The study “Phase imaging with computational specificity (PICS) for measuring dry mass changes in sub-cellular […]

Creating the Future of Stroke Recovery

Li-Qun Zhang | Via University of Maryland | December 7, 2020

$4.6 Million Award to Support Rehabilitation Engineering Research Center Staying upright is a common challenge for patients with neurological damage from a stroke or older adults with a high falling risk, but pinpointing the specific weaknesses causing falls in a system as complex as the human body can turn diagnosis into high-risk puzzle for clinicians. […]

New CRISPR-based test for COVID-19 uses a smartphone camera

Daniel Fletcher | Via Science Daily | December 4, 2020

Imagine swabbing your nostrils, putting the swab in a device, and getting a read-out on your phone in 15 to 30 minutes that tells you if you are infected with the COVID-19 virus. This has been the vision for a team of scientists at Gladstone Institutes, University of California, Berkeley (UC Berkeley), and University of […]

Bahram Javidi Developing Rapid COVID-19 Testing

Bahram Javidi | Via University of Connecticut | December 3, 2020

The COVID-19 pandemic has caused rapid changes across the globe in nearly every facet of life. Now, University of Connecticut professor of engineering Bahram Javidi is developing a low-cost, portable COVID-19 testing instrument to test for the virus just as quickly. Through support from the Office of the Vice President for Research’s COVID-19 Research Seed […]

CRISPR Screening IDs Factors for Turning Stem Cells into Neurons

Charles Gersbach | Via Genetic Engineering & Biotechnology News | December 2, 2020

Genetic reprogramming can help stem cells mature into desired cell types, but it is often kludgy, which is to say, clumsy and inefficient—or worse, inexact. It may produce cells that don’t mature quite as much as they should, or that fail to represent the exact right subtype. These shortcomings may be avoided if more elegant […]

City of Hope developed cancer-killing virus: activates immune system against colon cancer

Yuman Fong | Via Science Codex | December 1, 2020

A cancer-killing virus that City of Hope scientists developed could one day improve the immune system’s ability to eradicate tumors in colon cancer patients, reports a new study in Molecular Cancer Therapeutics, a journal of the American Association for Cancer Research. The preclinical research is a first step to showing that City of Hope’s oncolytic virus […]

Rethinking Hair Dye: A Natural New Process

Nathan Gianneschi | Via Medical Daily | November 30, 2020

Whether we buy it at a drugstore or at a salon, hair dye can make a big difference in how we feel about our appearance—but how safe is it? There are ongoing questions about whether or not hair dye increases cancer risks, with at least two studies linking permanent hair dye with increased likelihood of […]

Fink Receives PHM Society’s Inaugural Scott Clements MVP Award

Wolfgang Fink | Via University of Arizona | November 30, 2020

University of Arizona biomedical engineering and electrical and computer engineering professor Wolfgang Fink received the inaugural Scott Clements Most Valuable Person Award at the Prognostics and Health Management (PHM) Society’s 12th annual conference. The Scott Clements MVP Award recognizes individuals who have contributed to community engagement, cross-sector initiatives and other support of the PHM Society. […]

Study Reveals Connection Between Gut Bacteria and Vitamin D Levels

Rob Knight | Via UC San Diego | November 30, 2020

Our gut microbiomes — the many bacteria, viruses and other microbes living in our digestive tracts — play important roles in our health and risk for disease in ways that are only beginning to be recognized. University of California San Diego researchers and collaborators recently demonstrated in older men that the makeup of a person’s […]

Combination therapy might improve outcomes in treatment-resistant liver cancer

Dan Duda | Via Massachusetts General Hospital | November 30, 2020

A combination cancer therapy that is effective against treatment-resistant hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC) by inhibiting tumor growth and increasing survival has been identified by researchers at Massachusetts General Hospital (MGH). In a paper published in the Journal for ImmunoTherapy of Cancer, the investigators describe how the dual therapy — which combines the multikinase inhibitor drug regorafenib […]

Imaging method reveals a “symphony of cellular activities”

Ed Boyden | Via MIT | November 23, 2020

Within a single cell, thousands of molecules, such as proteins, ions, and other signaling molecules, work together to perform all kinds of functions — absorbing nutrients, storing memories, and differentiating into specific tissues, among many others. Deciphering these molecules, and all of their interactions, is a monumental task. Over the past 20 years, scientists have […]