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Archive for the ‘biotech/medical’ category: Page 2560

Sep 14, 2016

Microfabrica’s Tiny Revolution

Posted by in categories: biotech/medical, computing, engineering

I’m amazed no one has done this before, and there’s only one company doing it now. Microfabrica, based in Van Nuys, California, has perfected the technique of mass producing mechanical devices using the same electrodeposition technology used to make computer chips.

“We are the only high-volume production additive manufacturing platform in the market,” Microfabrica CEO Eric Miller tells me. “We use engineering grade metals to make commercially robust parts, and we’re focused on another end of the spectrum from where a lot of the 3D companies are focused, and that’s at the micro scale.”

The resulting devices are vanishingly small, and exquisitely made. How small? The company makes biopsy forceps less than a millimeter in diameter for a medical device company and timing mechanisms (i.e., clocks) that are less than half a centimeter across for a defense contractor, as well many other very small devices and precision parts.

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Sep 14, 2016

Making babies without eggs may be possible, say scientists

Posted by in category: biotech/medical

Scientists say early experiments suggest it may one day be possible to make babies without using eggs.

They have succeeded in creating healthy baby mice by tricking sperm into believing they were fertilising normal eggs.

The findings in Nature Communications, could, in the distant future, mean women can be removed from the baby-making process, say the researchers.

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Sep 14, 2016

Skin cells could be used instead of eggs to make motherless embryos

Posted by in category: biotech/medical

The futuristic scenario was proposed by a team at the University of Bath after producing a litter of mice with a technique that bypasses the usual step of fertilising an egg cell with sperm.

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Sep 14, 2016

The World First Hybrid Bio 3D Printer to be revealed at Digical Show

Posted by in categories: 3D printing, bioprinting, biotech/medical, engineering

South Korean-based company Rokit is a 3D printing manufacturer we’ve talked about on several occasions before. In February this year, they released Edison Invivo, a tissue engineering and bio-medical research 3D printer that uses a bio ink to produce cell structures in the form of organic tissue.

Now, as a constant innovator, Rokit is back with their latest and also the world first Multi-Use Hybrid Bio 3D printer — Rokit Invivo. What’s exciting is that this awesome bioprinter will be revealed very soon on 30th, September in the Digical Show held by London-based iMakr.

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Sep 13, 2016

More cancers are tied to obesity

Posted by in categories: biotech/medical, genetics, health

Interesting article overall; however, I have noticed many Gastric Bypass patients from my area who drastically loss weight quickly within a year had stomach, throat, and esophageal cancer. As with obesity being a trigger, I believe drastically changes with the body such as massive weight loss quickly could also trigger a cancer gene mutation. I would love to connect with others working of this type of research.


A review of more than a thousand studies has found solid evidence that being overweight or obese increases the risk for at least 13 types of cancer.

The study was conducted by a working group of the International Agency for Research on Cancer, part of the World Health Organisation.

Continue reading “More cancers are tied to obesity” »

Sep 13, 2016

Stiff and Oxygen-Deprived Tumors Promote Spread of Cancer

Posted by in category: biotech/medical

Interesting read.


When Hippocrates first described cancer around 400 B.C., he referred to the disease’s telltale tumors as “karkinos” — the Greek word for crab. The “Father of Western Medicine” likely noted that cancer’s creeping projections mirrored certain crustaceans, and the tumors ‘ characteristic hardness resembled a crab’s armored shell.

Later, scientists added another attribute: Tumors are hypoxic. That is, they grow so large and dense that they exclude blood vessels, causing a lack of oxygen in their cores. But what role these characteristics play in the development of cancer has remained a mystery.

Continue reading “Stiff and Oxygen-Deprived Tumors Promote Spread of Cancer” »

Sep 13, 2016

Fluoride in water doesn’t lower IQ or cause cancer, says health agency

Posted by in categories: biotech/medical, health

Adding flouride to drinking water is a safe and effective measure for preventing tooth decay, National Health and Medical Research Council analysis finds.

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Sep 13, 2016

Study: Imaging better than surgery for lung cancer staging

Posted by in category: biotech/medical

Endosonographic imaging is more accurate than surgery for staging of lung cancer, but a new study suggests it has no effect on rates of survival.

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Sep 13, 2016

Tuning materials and devices to adapt to their environment

Posted by in categories: biotech/medical, singularity, transportation

Definitely a big deal.

I look forward to the day when everything lives and adapts as well as interacts in their environments. Buildings, machines, autos, planes, etc. Last month we read about the living buildings that DARPA is focused on that utilizes synthetic cells which enables buildings and other structures to self repair themselves much like human cells do.

Definitely glad to see more and more people jump on the Singularity path.

Continue reading “Tuning materials and devices to adapt to their environment” »

Sep 13, 2016

Early cancer detection: Russian researchers on verge of breakthrough

Posted by in categories: biotech/medical, nanotechnology

TheTribune: NEW DELHI: Russian researchers have developed a nanotechnology tool for early diagnosis of cancer and are planning to launch clinical trials of the product in 2018.

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