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Using 3-D printers to create skull implants or replacement joints is exciting; running off living organs would be revolutionary.
As concerns about cyber attacks on medical devices and hospital networks rise, a new system aims to detect malware intrusions.
All the terrifying world’s a stage, and artists borrow tools of the theater to give models in drills remarkably lifelike wounds and burns.
Elegant in its simplicity, saline solution is a staple in hospitals.
UV light proves itself as an annihilator of germs.
Technetium, a diagnostic workhorse, provides high definition images with minimal radiation. But it’s supply could dry up tomorrow.
Microscopic models—half living, half not—may prove more reliable than animals in explaining human disease and testing therapies.
Light-activated genes, now illuminating brain circuitry in rodents and monkeys, may help solve mysteries of human disease.
The author undergoes her first ultrasound, her anxiety heightened by her past as a genetic counselor.
Researchers may have discovered a way to restore vocal cords using a polymer found in moisturizing creams.
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