This fancy strip of torso garb keeps tabs on a patient's heart rate, temperature, and other vital signs as well as their position inside of the hospital itself with a GPS-like system that functions in closed spaces. This intelligent t-shirt can also detect the patient's position - if they're sitting, lying down, standing, walking, or running.
A fscinating look into the nature of change and life. I'd consider this a version of evolution but at the scale of an individual and its life instead of a species.
This study, from the University of Texas, injected mice brains with brain tissue from an Alzheimer's disease patient.. The mice developed Alzheimer's disease pathology
Before life existed on Earth, there was just matter, inorganic dead "stuff." How improbable is it that life arose? And -- could it use a different type of chemistry? Using an elegant definition of life (anything that can evolve), chemist Lee Cronin is exploring this question by attempting to create a fully inorganic cell using a "Lego kit" of inorganic molecules -- no carbon -- that can assemble, replicate and compete.
Review of the Entertainment Software and Cognitive Neurotherapeutics Conference, ESCoNS, at the University of California San Francisco.
An attempt to unit neurologists and game designers.
The health battles of millions, recorded digitally, open a world of virtual research.
The antidepressant Paxil was approved for sale in 1992, the cholesterol-lowering drug Pravachol in 1996. Company studies proved that each drug, on its own, works and is safe. But what about when they are taken together?
By mining tens of thousands of electronic patient records, researchers at Stanford University quickly discovered an unexpected answer: people who take both drugs have higher blood glucose levels. The effect was even greater in diabetics, for whom excess blood sugar is a health danger.