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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.

 

 

National Medal of Science Awarded to Oncofertility Innovator, MSU Research Foundation Professor Teresa Woodruff

Teresa Woodruff | Via Michigan State University | January 6, 2025

Teresa K. Woodruff joined an elite group of Americans who have received two national medals of honor when President Joe Biden announced the latest recipients of the National Medal of Science on Jan. 3. Arati Prabhakar, director of the White House Office of Science and Technology Policy, presented Woodruff with the medal at a ceremony […]

David R. Walt Receives National Medal of Technology and Innovation

David Walt | Via Business Wire | January 6, 2025

Award represents nation’s highest honor for technological achievement Quanterix Corporation (NASDAQ: QTRX), a company fueling scientific discovery through ultrasensitive biomarker detection, today announced that David R. Walt, co-inventor of the Company’s Simoa technology has received the National Medal of Technology and Innovation, bestowed by the President of the United States. Since it was first awarded […]

Stanford cardiologist, Paul Yock awarded National Medal of Tech and Innovation

Paul Yock | Via Beckers Hospital Review | January 6, 2025

Interventional cardiologist, researcher and inventor Paul Yock, MD, has been awarded the National Medal of Technology and Innovation by President Joe Biden. The medal, first awarded in 1985, recognizes Americans who have utilized science and technology to “tackle challenging problems and deliver innovative solutions for Americans and for communities around the world,” according to a […]

Emery N. Brown, innovative neuroscientist, statistician and anesthesiologist, earns National Medal of Science

Emery Brown | Via MIT | January 3, 2025

Director of the White House Office of Science and Technology Policy bestows the nation’s highest scientific honor on Brown, fellow winners, at a White House ceremony. Emery N. Brown, Edward Hood Taplin Professor of Medical Engineering and Computational Neuroscience in The Picower Institute for Learning and Memory at MIT, has won the National Medical of […]

A ‘ticking time bomb’ for liver cancer

Ludmil Alexandrov | Via Science Daily | January 2, 2025

Scientists at University of California San Diego School of Medicine have shed new light on the development of liver cancer, the sixth most frequently diagnosed cancer and fourth leading cause of cancer deaths worldwide. The study, published in Nature, reveals a complex interplay between cellular metabolism and DNA damage that drives the progression of fatty […]

Predicting Triple-Negative Breast Cancer Immunotherapy Outcomes

Aleksander Popel | Via Oncology Times | December 31, 2024

A team of computational scientists and cancer specialists from the Johns Hopkins Sidney Kimmel Comprehensive Cancer Center and Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine have developed a mathematical model to improve the performance of predictive biomarkers for PD-1 blockade in patients with metastatic triple-negative breast cancer (TNBC). The project builds on previous research investigating whether […]

Tumbling stem cells? Watch how movement plays a part in their fate

Fan Yang | Via Stanford University | December 19, 2024

Manish Ayushman, a PhD student in bioengineering, has watched more than a thousand hours of microscopic footage of stem cells in the lab. At first, the cells seemed like they weren’t doing much of anything. But when Ayushman looked a little more closely, he noticed they were moving ever so slightly – turning and pulsing […]

Brain cells remain healthy after a month on the International Space Station, but mature faster than brain cells on Earth

Jeanne Loring | Via Science Daily | December 17, 2024

Microgravity is known to alter the muscles, bones, the immune system and cognition, but little is known about its specific impact on the brain. To discover how brain cells respond to microgravity, Scripps Research scientists, in collaboration with the New York Stem Cell Foundation, sent tiny clumps of stem-cell derived brain cells called “organoids” to […]

Research Spotlight: Improving Liver Cancer Outcomes Through Enhanced Immunotherapy

Dan Duda | Via Massachusetts General Hospital | December 13, 2024

Dan G. Duda, DMD, PhD, of the Edwin L. Steele Laboratories for Tumor Biology and Department of Radiation Oncology at Massachusetts General Hospital, is the corresponding author of a paper published in Cancer Immunology Research, “Combination CXCR4 and PD1 Blockade Enhances Intratumoral Dendritic Cell Activation and Immune Responses Against Hepatocellular Carcinoma.” How would you summarize […]

UCSF Study Suggests Heavy Lifting Kills Your Back

Jeffrey Lotz | Via EurekAlert | December 6, 2024

UC San Francisco researchers have shown in studies of mice that high loads on the spine alter the physical structure and biologic activity of discs — the gel-filled cushions between bones in the spine. “The findings should lead to improved treatments for one cause of low back pain, disc degeneration — a condition in which […]

UTD Researchers Develop At‑Home Sensors To Detect Food & Water Contaminants

Shalini Prasad | Via Dallas Innovates | December 3, 2024

The recent nationwide alert about E. coli-laced organic carrots is just the latest example that our food safety isn’t guaranteed. Now a research team at UT Dallas is exploring a way that people can do a final check for contaminants—right in their own homes. From contaminated carrots to harmful hamburger, tainted food has caused sickness […]

Liquid Ink Enables Temporary Scalp-Printed Electronic Tattoos for Measuring Brainwaves

Nanshu Lu | Via Inside Precision Medicine | December 2, 2024

Researchers at the University of Texas and the University of California, Los Angeles (UCLA) say they have created a liquid ink that can be directly printed onto a patient’s scalp to measure brain activity, offering an alternative to traditional electroencephalography (EEG). The new technology, detailed in the journal Cell Biomaterials, is part of ongoing research […]

Using AI To Intercept Pancreatic Cancer in Black Patients

Debiao Li | Via Cedars-Sinai | November 26, 2024

Cedars-Sinai Cancer Leading Artificial Intelligence Study to Identify Risk of Pancreatic Cancer in Vulnerable Group Cedars-Sinai investigators who previously developed an imaging tool that used artificial intelligence (AI) to predict pancreatic cancer are now working to adapt that tool specifically for Black patients, who have disproportionately high rates of the disease. “The incidence of pancreatic […]

Skin Tone Bias Reduces Accuracy in Photoacoustic Imaging for Breast Cancer Detection

Bisi Bell | Via Inside Precision Medicine | November 20, 2024

A study from Johns Hopkins University, published in Biophotonics Discovery, examined how skin tone affects the accuracy of photoacoustic imaging (PAI), a technology gaining traction in breast cancer diagnostics, especially in situations where traditional mammography is insufficient. The study shows how image reconstruction methods and laser wavelengths influence the visibility of cancerous targets in patients […]

Celebrating Electrical Engineering Pioneer Ming Hsieh

Ming Hsieh | Via USC | November 20, 2024

Ming Hsieh shares his journey as an engineer and innovator with the Trojan family including a new generation of Electrical and Computer Engineering (ECE) students, recounting his humble beginnings in rural China to his rise as founder and innovator in the biometrics scene. As a child, Ming Hsieh fondly recalls helping his father repair electronic […]

Donation After Circulatory Death Kidney Transplant Outcomes Not Affected by Wait Time

Matthew Bacchetta | Via Renal + Urology News | November 18, 2024

Extending wait time criteria from 1 to 3 hours after withdrawal of life-sustaining treatment for kidney donation after circulatory death (DCD) does not compromise kidney transplant outcomes and may help ease the organ shortage, investigators report. The UK stipulates a 3-hour minimum observation time after withdrawal of life support before potential donors are no longer […]

There’s a Shortage of Blood. So Why Don’t We Make Some?

Keith Neeves | Via University of Colorado | November 15, 2024

A CU School of Medicine professor calls synthetic blood “one of the holy grails of biomedical research,” but creating an ample supply is still a long way off. Every year, more than 14 million units (pints) of blood are transfused in the United States. Every two seconds, someone needs blood or blood products. Yet there’s […]

Real-Life Star Wars Tech: MIT Researchers Have Created a Miniature “Tractor Beam” To Capture Cells

Joel Voldman | Via SciTechDaily | November 10, 2024

The tiny device uses a tightly focused beam of light to capture and manipulate cells. MIT researchers have developed a miniature, chip-based “tractor beam,” like the one that captures the Millennium Falcon in the film “Star Wars,” that could someday help biologists and clinicians study DNA, classify cells, and investigate the mechanisms of disease. Small […]

A new approach to modeling complex biological systems

Douglas Lauffenburger | Via MIT | November 5, 2024

MIT engineers’ new model could help researchers glean insights from genomic data and other huge datasets. Over the past two decades, new technologies have helped scientists generate a vast amount of biological data. Large-scale experiments in genomics, transcriptomics, proteomics, and cytometry can produce enormous quantities of data from a given cellular or multicellular system. However, […]

Huntington’s Aggregates Disrupted by Protein-Like Polymer, Rescuing Neurons in Mouse Model

Nathan Gianneschi | Via Genetic Engineering & Biotechnology News | November 1, 2024

Scientists at Northwestern, and Case Western Reserve universities have developed the first polymer-based therapeutic for the genetic disorder Huntington’s disease, an incurable neurodegenerative disease that causes nerve cells to break down in the brain. The new treatment leverages peptide-brush polymers, which act as a shield to prevent proteins from binding to one another. In studies […]