Archive for the ‘biotech/medical’ category: Page 2494
Jan 21, 2017
Artificial Intelligence is Leading a Revolution in Medicine
Posted by Shane Hinshaw in categories: biotech/medical, robotics/AI
In Brief The success of this work will help healthcare professionals diagnose more accurately and efficiently, and it will allow for more diagnostic care in areas with limited healthcare services and providers.
In early August, IBM announced that it will acquire Merge Healthcare Inc., a company that sells systems that help medical professionals access and store medical images. This move is a critical step in IBM’s plan to put AI to work medically by training its Watson software to identify maladies like heart disease and cancer.
Merge is valuable to IBM because it owns 30 billion images, including computerized tomography, X-rays, and magnetic-resonance-imaging scans. The company can use these images in its deep learning training program. IBM is hoping that the same kind of software that lets Flickr recognize your face or a dog in your photos can help Watson identify symptoms of diseases.
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Jan 20, 2017
Google’s Brin hints at bright future for smart contact lenses
Posted by Karen Hurst in category: biotech/medical
I am still waiting for mine. I cannot wait to the day I use my smart lenses to take pics, videos, login to view work email, etc. BTW — I look forward to day we eliminate email too.
Google may have shelved Google Glass, its failed attempt to persuade the world that internet-connected spectacles were the next big thing, but it has not given up on the concept of smart eyeware.
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Jan 20, 2017
New Delivery Technique Enables Rapid Treatment for Inflammation
Posted by Karen Hurst in category: biotech/medical
A team of engineers has developed a new RNA delivery technique that uses short bursts of ultrasound to efficiently deliver RNA into cells, reducing colon inflammation.
MIT and Brigham and Women’s Hospital researchers have demonstrated that they can deliver strands of RNA efficiently to colon cells, using bursts of ultrasound waves that propel the RNA into the cells. Using this approach, the researchers dramatically turned down the production of a protein involved in inflammatory bowel disease (IBD), in mice.
“What we saw in this paper was the ultrasound can enable rapid delivery of these molecules,” says Carl Schoellhammer, a postdoc at MIT’s Koch Institute for Integrative Cancer Research and the study’s lead author. “In this case it was proinflammatory molecules that we were shutting off, and we saw tremendous knockdown of those proteins.”
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Jan 20, 2017
8 people infected in rare U.S. outbreak of rat virus
Posted by Karen Hurst in categories: biotech/medical, health
Eeek.
(HealthDay)—Eight people who worked at several rat-breeding facilities in Illinois and Wisconsin have been infected with a virus not commonly found in the United States, federal health officials said Friday.
This is the first known outbreak of Seoul virus associated with pet rats in the United States, although there have been several outbreaks in wild rats, according to the federal Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.
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Jan 20, 2017
Overall survival poor in unresected anaplastic thyroid CA
Posted by Karen Hurst in category: biotech/medical
Not good to hear.
(HealthDay)—For patients with unresected anaplastic thyroid carcinoma (ATC), overall survival (OS) is poor, but radiation therapy (RT) dose is associated with improved survival, according to a study published online Dec. 27 in Cancer.
Todd A. Pezzi, from the Baylor College of Medicine in Houston, and colleagues examined the outcomes of patients with unresected ATC who underwent no surgery or grossly incomplete resection. The authors assessed correlates of OS for 1,288 patients.
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Jan 20, 2017
Internet of Things smart needle probes the brain during surgery
Posted by Karen Hurst in categories: biotech/medical, internet, neuroscience
A “smart” needle with an embedded camera is helping doctors perform safer brain surgery.
The device was developed by researchers at the University of Adelaide in South Australia and uses a tiny camera to identify at-risk blood vessels.
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Jan 20, 2017
By 2030, Hospitals May Be a Thing of the Past
Posted by Shane Hinshaw in categories: biotech/medical, genetics, health, nanotechnology, robotics/AI
In Brief:
- Predictions from the co-chair of the World Economic Forum’s Future Council, Melanie Walker, say we’ll soon enter a post-hospital world due to advances in personalized medicine, health monitoring, and nanotechnology.
- New and evolving technologies in medical science convince Walker we’ll live in a society not dependent on hospitals by 2030.
As the world of medicine is increasingly changed by biology, technology, communications, genetics, and robotics, predicting the outlook of the next few decades of medicine becomes harder. But that is exactly what Melanie Walker of the World Economic Forum does, and she predicts a bright new future for healthcare.
Jan 20, 2017
Intrinsic resistance to the idea of life extension or wrong messaging?
Posted by Steve Hill in categories: biotech/medical, life extension
Why is it so hard to convince people living longer is a good thing? This short article has some evidence worth considering.
Most advocates of life extension report facing resistance to the idea of increased lifespans by medical means when trying to disseminate this idea among general public. Resistance manifests itself in many forms, ranging from concerns such as overpopulation to concerns about unequal access to life extending treatments. But the most unexpected thing is probably that people often don’t want an increased lifespan at all. Surveys in different countries show, that when people are asked “how long would you like to live?”, they often give a number equal to or slightly higher than the current life expectancy in a given country[1–4].
But wait… Isn’t extending life for more decades a good thing that everyone should strive for? In reality we often do not see enough enthusiasm for the idea in general. So why is this?
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Jan 20, 2017
Team discovers how bacteria exploit a chink in the body’s armor
Posted by Steve Hill in categories: biotech/medical, life extension
Microbial burden is a real problem in aging and researchers are finding ways to boost our immune system to resist these microscopic enemies.
Microbial burden is a significant contribution to aging and our bodies are under daily attack from these microscopic invaders. The more completely we can remove these invaders the less impact they will have on the aging process.
“Researchers at the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign and Newcastle University in the U.K. are investigating how infectious microbes can survive attacks by the body’s immune system. By better understanding the bacteria’s defenses, new strategies can be developed to cure infections that are currently resistant to treatments, the researchers said”
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