Silk sericin, a glycoprotein traditionally regarded as a by‐product of silk fibroin extraction, has emerged as a promising biomaterial owing to its unique biological and physicochemical properties.
The emergence of biodegradable polymers has transformed tissue engineering and biomedical applications by offering materials that can safely degrade within the body while providing temporary support ...
When Tom Gaborski began at RIT in the spring of 2012, he was the first permanent faculty member to join the new Biomedical Engineering program in the Kate Gleason College of Engineering. Over the ...
Researchers at RIT are developing non-invasive technology that will better assess cardiac tissue response to thermal energy, a common therapy approach for both cancer and cardiac arrhythmia treatments ...
Miami University’s Biomedical Engineering and Biotechnology research cluster leverages interdisciplinary collaboration to solve critical health and clinical challenges. Research spans from tissue ...
Join one of the top-ranked biomedical engineering programs in the world and become one of the PhD students at the heart of our collaborative environment. Your research efforts here will help lay the ...
Biomedical engineers at the University of California, Davis, have created a lab-grown tissue similar to natural cartilage by giving it a bit of a stretch. The tissue, grown under tension but without a ...
Professor Shelly Peyton will be joining the Tufts Department of Biomedical Engineering in July. The department was founded in 2002 and chaired by Professor David Kaplan. Kaplan stepped down in 2022, ...
Eggshells, which are primarily composed of a form of calcium called calcium carbonate, are used in a wide range of applications – from a supplement in chicken feed to natural pest control for the ...
There was a lack of effective, cell-free biomaterials for bladder tissue regeneration that could reliably restore function without the complexities and risks of cell-seeded scaffolds. The breakthrough ...
The University’s 2024 Commencement, a three-day celebration held on campus, was an exciting opportunity for graduates to celebrate their accomplishments while reflecting on their journeys as Chargers.
A native to the Boston area, Professor Thompson earned her Bachelor of Science in Mechanical Engineering from UMass Lowell. She then went on to pursue a Master of Science in Aeronautical and ...