Archive for the ‘biotech/medical’ category: Page 1695
Apr 1, 2020
New test can detect COVID-19 in just five minutes
Posted by Future Timeline in category: biotech/medical
In yet another demonstration of how rapidly technology can advance, biotech firm Abbott Laboratories has developed a new molecular test for the detection of novel coronavirus (COVID-19), which delivers results in just five minutes.
Abbott Laboratories, headquartered in Illinois, United States, has been granted Emergency Use Authorisation (EUA) by the Food and Drug Administration (FDA) for adapting COVID-19 tests to its ID NOW platform.
Continue reading “New test can detect COVID-19 in just five minutes” »
Apr 1, 2020
Israel tests coronavirus vaccine prototype on rodents at defense lab
Posted by Omuterema Akhahenda in category: biotech/medical
JERUSALEM (Reuters) — Israel has begun testing a COVID-19 vaccine prototype on rodents at its bio-chemical defense laboratory, a source said on Tuesday.
Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu ordered the Israel Institute for Biological Research (IIBR), in rural Ness Ziona, to join the fight against the coronavirus pandemic on Feb. 1, prompting an easing of its secrecy as it cooperates with civilian scientists and private firms.
In a statement, Netanyahu’s office said IIBR director Shmuel Shapira had informed him of “significant progress” in designing a vaccine prototype and that the institute “is now preparing a model for commencing an animal trial”.
Apr 1, 2020
Not Made in China Is Global Tech’s Next Big Trend
Posted by Derick Lee in categories: biotech/medical, economics
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Three years ago, manufacturing gadgets in China was a given. That’s changed fundamentally in the era of trade wars and coronavirus.
Under the new reality, the world’s electronics makers are actively seeking ways to diversify their supply chains and reduce their dependence on any single country, no matter how attractive.
Apr 1, 2020
This Is How Your Immune System Reacts to Coronavirus
Posted by Neurozo Huang in category: biotech/medical
This Is How Your Immune System Reacts to #Coronavirus: https://bit.ly/3bHkdnv by Dana G Smith Explaining why COVID-19 induces different symptoms on different individuals. #COVID19 #CoronavirusOutbreak
Here’s how the immune system responds when a person catches Covid-19 — and what that means for treatment.
Apr 1, 2020
Useful 3D printed tools against coronavirus COVID-19
Posted by Omuterema Akhahenda in categories: 3D printing, biotech/medical
Don’t be stupid be innovative. Keep you, your friends and family safe. Here is a collection of free 3D printable tools that may help in this fight against coronavirus.
Here is a selection of the most useful 3D models to make with a 3D printer agains coronavirus covid-19.
Mar 31, 2020
Turbulent Gas Clouds and Respiratory Pathogen Emissions: Potential Implications for Reducing Transmission of COVID-19
Posted by Nicholi Avery in category: biotech/medical
The coronavirus can travel up to 23–27 feet :
This JAMA Insights Clinical Update discusses the need to better understand the dynamics of respiratory disease transmission by better characterizing transmission routes, the role of patient physiology in shaping them, and best approaches for source control in the context of the COVID-19 outbreak.
Mar 31, 2020
One world government needed to cope with COVID-19, says former British PM
Posted by Tracy R. Atkins in categories: biotech/medical, government
The Guardian reported that Brown would have liked the U.N. Security Council to have been invited to an emergency online meeting of the G20 countries today. The meeting, hosted by Saudi Arabia, is tackling the issue of the novel coronavirus.
“This is not something that can be dealt with in one country,” Brown said.
“There has to be a coordinated global response.”
Mar 31, 2020
Getting Closer to a Blood Test for Alzheimer’s Disease?
Posted by Paul Battista in categories: biotech/medical, neuroscience
As research on Alzheimer’s disease (AD) advances, a desperate need remains for an easy blood test to help diagnose the condition as early as possible. Ideally, such a test could also distinguish AD from other forms of dementia that produce similar symptoms. As published recently in Nature Medicine, an NIH-funded research team has designed a simple blood test that is on course to meet these criteria [1].
The latest work builds on a large body of work showing that one secret to predicting a person’s cognitive decline and treatment response in AD lies in a protein called tau. Using the powerful, but expensive, approach of PET scan imaging, we know that tau builds up in the brain as Alzheimer’s disease progresses. We also know that some tau spills from the brain into the bloodstream.
The trouble is that the circulating tau protein breaks down far too quickly for a blood test to offer a reliable measure of what’s happening in a person’s brain. A few years ago, researchers discovered a possible solution: test for blood levels of a slightly different and more stable version of the protein called pTau181 [2]. (The “p” in its name comes from the addition of phosphorus in a particular part of the protein’s structure.)
Mar 31, 2020
Maker Mask launches in Seattle using 3D-printing technology to produce protective gear
Posted by Omuterema Akhahenda in categories: 3D printing, biotech/medical, engineering, finance, government, health
The 19 3D-printable parts that make up the mask are visible on the Maker Mask website along with details on materials needed, download instructions, videos, the ability to donate to the cause and more. The cost of each finished mask, printed in about three hours, is estimated to be between $2 and $3.
A technology veteran and a 3D-printing “savant” have teamed with other members of industry, health care and government to launch Maker Mask, a Seattle nonprofit creating medically endorsed, reusable protective masks using everyday 3D printers.