Topics
Podcast
Magazine
Popular Tags
More
Treating the heart today involves less cutting and more cutting-edge technology. But where does that leave cardiac surgeons?
Brain surgery unexpectedly impaired a writer/illustrator’s abilities to speak, read and write, leaving her to wonder if she would ever get her old self back.
Transplant surgeon Amy Friedman argues: Since we can’t get enough organs for free, why not pay for them?
Surgeons report on which songs help them get pumped in the operating room.
During surgery, dozens of sponges are placed in the body. One company wants to ensure that they all make it out.
Medical bloggers discuss their fears and worries.
Doctoring for Kenneth Kamler isn’t limited to his office in New York—or the Amazon rainforest, or the mountains of Bhutan, or even the reaches of space.
Biofilms are microbial metropolises: teeming, diverse and, when attached to surgical implants, nearly impossible to subdue.
As more people receive joint implants, one company hopes to make a synthetic bone that works with the body, not against it.
Why do scrubs look they way they do?
No Articles Found.
We use cookies and other tools to enhance your experience on our website and to analyze our web traffic. For more information about these cookies and the data collected, please refer to our Privacy Policy.