Flexible sensors can detect movement in GI tract
Ingestible devices could diagnose gastrointestinal slowdown or monitor food intake.
Ingestible devices could diagnose gastrointestinal slowdown or monitor food intake.
Drug already in clinical trials may be effective on some aggressive adenocarcinomas.
Cutting off a process that cancerous cells rely on can force them to stop growing.
New technique could make it easier to use mRNA to treat disease or deliver vaccines.
Graham Walker, Michael Yaffe, and Robert Weinberg earn support from the National Institutes of Health to further their research endeavors.
Microparticles created by new 3-D fabrication method could release drugs or vaccines long after injection.
Recent additions bring diverse expertise and cultural perspectives to research community.
Hydrogel-based capsules could expand and reside in the GI tract for days, slowly releasing medication.
Tiny implantable “seeds” of tissue produce fully functional livers.
Targeted treatment could be used for pneumonia and other bacterial infections.
Marking its first anniversary, the Koch Institute’s Marble Center for Cancer Nanomedicine goes full steam ahead.
Seven award-winning faculty members represent the departments of Physics, Chemistry, and Biology.
Biologists discover the immune system can eliminate cells with too many or too few chromosomes.
Findings support new strategy of continuous drug delivery by implantable device.
Thin fibers could be used to deliver drugs or electrical stimulation, with less damage to the brain.