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A light-activated pacemaker dissolves in the body after use, offering safer, wireless heart care - especially for newborns ...
Described in Nature, the breakthrough design incorporates a wearable patch for the patient containing an infra-red light ...
Smaller than a grain of rice, this is the tiniest pacemaker in the world. It is designed to work with hearts of all sizes but ...
Although it can work with hearts of all sizes, the pacemaker is particularly well-suited to the tiny, fragile hearts of ...
Engineers at Illinois' Northwestern University have developed the tiniest pacemaker you'll ever see. It's several times ...
Now, engineers at Northwestern University have developed what could have saved Armstrong’s life: the world’s smallest ...
More than two-fifths of Oregon community pharmacies require a prescription to purchase syringes, even though they can be sold ...
The tiny device developed by Professors John Rogers, Igor Efimov, and Yonggang Huang can be inserted with a syringe, and then dissolve after it’s no longer needed.
The FENYX is valveless and able to self-prime 10x-40x faster than a syringe pump, helping OEMs eliminate unnecessary fluidic ...
Developed by engineers from Northwestern University, the pacemaker is the size of a grain of rice and could help save babies ...
Because the human heart requires only a small amount of electrical stimulation, researchers were able to shrink their ...