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Leading academics and practitioners from the northeast United States
will discuss the latest advances in bioengineering research and
nanotechnology – such as the “printing” of human organs from ink jets
and a new, injectable method for relieving lower back pain – at a
conference hosted by Brown University April 4-6, 2008.
It is
the first time that Brown has hosted the annual Northeast
Bioengineering Conference, which will take place at various sites on
campus. The program schedule, speakers and other information can be
found at http://www.nebec.org/index.htm
Conference
organizer Thomas Webster, associate professor of engineering and the
orthopaedics at Brown, said the conference is about the science.
“What
are the challenges that face us in 2008 in bioengineering? What are the
yet unexplored promises in bioengineering? A number of exceptional
researchers from around the world will provide many insights into the
future of bioengineering,” Webster said.
Among the highlights at the conference are:
- A presentation by Gavin Braithwaite, a vice president of
research at the Cambridge Polymer Group in Boston, on a new method for
relieving lower back pain.
Back pain is the second most
common neurological ailment in the United States – only headache is
more common, according to the National Institutes of Health. The NIH
also reports that back pain is the most common cause of job-related
disability and a leading contributor to missed work, causing Americans
to spend at least $50 billion each year on treatment.
Braithwaite’s research involves injecting a liquid into the nucleus
polposus, the gelatinous inner section of the spinal disc responsible
for bearing weight and determining the spine’s motion. The injected
liquid transforms into a solid in minutes without chemical reaction,
creating a synthetic cushion that has the same effect the body provides
naturally.
Braithwaite will present results from short-term animal studies and lab experiments.
- A
presentation by Paul Calvert, a professor in the Materials and Textile
Department at the University of Massachusetts–Dartmouth, on “printing”
human organs.
Science fiction? It may not be too far off.
That’s because Calvert has succeeded in the ink jet printing of stem
cells and proteins, the fundamental building blocks of organisms and
the primary constituents of hair, tendons, muscle, skin, and cartilage.
The stem cells that Calvert has printed have been undamaged and have
high survival rates, he will report. The next step is to build tissue
samples for implant or testing, and the ultimate goal will be to use
the technology to print human organs.
- A
presentation by Srinivas Sridhar, vice provost for research and chair
of the Physics Department at Northeastern University, on the emerging
field of nanomedicine.
Nanomedicine is the application of
nanotechnology – the engineering of tiny machines – to prevent and
treat disease in the human body.
In his presentation, Sridhar
will give an overview of sorts, explaining how nanomedicine “seeks to
exploit a timely convergence of two parallel recent developments toward
the diagnosis and therapy of disease – the decoding of the human genome
that has led to greater understanding of the molecular basis of
diseases, and nanotechology, which offers the means to control single
molecular interactions.”
Sridhar also serves as director of
Nanomedicine Science and Technology, a program funded by the National
Cancer Institute and the National Science Foundation.
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Editors:
Brown University has a fiber link television studio available for
domestic and international live and taped interviews and maintains an
ISDN line for radio interviews. For more information, call the Office
of Media Relations at (401) 863-2476.
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