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Prototypes play well with humans, helping patients with autism and Alzheimer’s. But don’t expect an arm of such aides just yet.
Dialysis clinics could be a thing of the past with the development of a portable, wearable device.
The level of dental care we now enjoy dates back to the arrival of plug-in electric drills.
Liquids act differently in tiny spaces, enabling lab-on-a-chip technology to transform research, drug discovery and disease diagnosis.
A new kind of video contest has serious aims, from motivating cancer patients to solving the mysteries of how proteins fold.
Getting the various pieces of operating room equipment to communicate with one another could save lives—but it’s easier said than done.
Can bees smell disease?
Engineering students at Duke University created the BlueRay, which is being used experimentally on jaundiced babies in the developing world.
Human joints wear out, and often replacements do too. Now innovative designs are improving longevity and function.
The radioactive isotope, used in some 20 million medical scans each year, briefly found itself amid controversy.
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