BME News

September 28, 2017

In the news: How Purdue is engineering solutions to the heroin epidemic

Jacqueline Linnes, assistant professor in the Weldon School of Biomedical Engineering, is developing a smart watch that monitors a person's health in real time. The device tracks physiological measurements, detects overdoses, and is connected to a smart phone that could call for help.
September 27, 2017

Sangha receives Baxter Young Investigator Award

Gurneet Sangha, a fourth-year doctoral student at the Weldon School of Biomedical Engineering at Purdue University, has received a Baxter Young Investigator Award. The award honors researchers who are focused on developing critical care therapies and medical products that save and sustain patients’ lives. Sangha is advised by Assistant Professor Craig Goergen.
September 21, 2017

Spectrometers could improve point-of-care patient diagnosis

PURSPEC Technologies Inc., whose miniature spectrometers may improve medical diagnosis and patient compliance by reducing the time needed to analyze samples, has opened offices in the Purdue Research Park. PURSPEC also has locations in Beijing and Shanghai.
September 18, 2017

AutoCPR senior project nationally recognized

Four students from the Weldon School of Biomedical Engineering took on the challenge of using engineering to try to save lives in Ecuador and other countries, and their efforts have been nationally recognized.
September 11, 2017

Purdue researchers receive grant to improve mobile testing for anemia

The National Institutes of Health Fogarty International Center has awarded Purdue University's Young Kim, associate professor with the Weldon School of Biomedical Engineering, and Md Munirul Haque, research scientist with the Regenstrief Center for Healthcare Engineering, and their interdisciplinary research team, a $385,000, two-year grant to improve mobile testing for anemia in resource-limited settings.
September 7, 2017

Suresh selected for NSF I-Corps cohort

The NSF I-Corps program has selected doctoral student Shruthi Suresh to join other innovative student researchers for one of its fall 2017 cohorts.
September 1, 2017

In the News: Purdue Visionaries Build Device to Prevent Blindness

An Indianapolis-based startup believes its device could be groundbreaking in the world of ophthalmology--and life-changing for patients with glaucoma. The disease is the second-leading cause of blindness, but Purdue-affiliated startup Bionode says its noninvasive technology—enveloped in off-the-shelf contact lenses and glasses—reverses the physical cause of glaucoma.
< Previous 10 | Viewing 651 to 660 of 1484 | Next 10 >