Bio-engineered skin grafts can play an important role in the treatment of burn victims. Researchers at the University of ...
Researchers in Japan are exploring a future where the body itself becomes a health monitor, no screens or batteries required.
Researchers say the living sensor display technology may have potential applications beyond human healthcare, in veterinary ...
The Cell Production Center at Lausanne University Hospital is working flat out trying to grow new skin for badly burned ...
Learn how engineered skin turns internal biological signals into visible light, offering a new way to monitor inflammation ...
Bio-engineered skin grafts can play an important role in the treatment of burn victims. Researchers at UZH have been working on new approaches for such grafts for over 15 years. This work led to the ...
Wearable health devices, such as smartwatches, have become commonplace, enabling the continuous monitoring of physiological ...
Wearable health devices, such as smartwatches, have become commonplace, enabling the continuous monitoring of physiological ...
A high-tech “living skin” implant glows green to warn when illness is about to strike. The next generation of wearable health ...
Skin grafting involves surgically removing skin from one area of the body and transplanting it to another. A skin graft may be needed for many medical reasons, including loss of skin due to injury, ...
Burn, trauma, and plastic surgery patients and others needing skin autografts often have limited quantities of healthy tissue from which to take skin biopsies, and when skin grafts are transplanted, ...