Author: dhallett

Better surgery: New glue developed at Purdue could make millions of medical procedures safer, less invasive for patients

More than 230 million invasive surgeries are performed worldwide each year – and nearly all of those procedures create additional tissue damage from stitches and staples. Researchers at Purdue University are hoping to significantly decrease that damage with a new surgical adhesive technology.

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Mars may provide our best glimpse into Earth’s beginnings. Meet the Purdue researcher exploring the Red Planet

Briony Horgan, a professor of earth, atmospheric and planetary sciences and scientist on NASA’s Curiosity and 2020 Mars rover missions, searches Mars for clues about its early history, and ours.

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Millions of birds die in collisions each year, but lights could change that

Millions of birds die each year in collisions with planes, and airports have used everything from fireworks to herding dogs to scare them away. Some methods have been relatively successful, but they’re useless after the plane takes off. Researchers at Purdue University may have just found a solution.

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The future is now: Purdue Quantum Center projects picked for NSF initiative

Quantum research at Purdue University is taking great leaps studying the smallest of particles with Monday’s (Sept. 24) announcement of two projects picked for the National Science Foundation’s Quantum Leap Initiative.

The projects were two of only 25 picked by the NSF for the new initiative, which will use quantum mechanics to observe, manipulate and control the behavior of particles and energy at atomic and subatomic scales, resulting in next-generation technologies.

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Simulations of every woman’s breast tissue address delay on enhanced MRI cancer detection

Purdue University researchers have simulated how over 20 different breast tissue ratios respond to heat given off by MRIs at higher field strengths than available in hospitals today.

The simulations would allow cutting-edge MRI techniques to finally show that they meet safety limits, as defined by entities like the U.S. Food and Drug Administration, and start clinical trials for real-life use.

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Super cheap earth element to advance new battery tech to the industryv

Worldwide efforts to make sodium-ion batteries just as functional as lithium-ion batteries have long since controlled sodium’s tendency to explode, but not yet resolved how to prevent sodium-ions from “getting lost” during the first few times a battery charges and discharges. Now, Purdue University researchers made a sodium powder version that fixes this problem and holds a charge properly.

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Standing on their own: Purdue body support device helps people learn to walk again after a stroke, trauma

A Purdue University researcher with a passion to use engineering technology to improve health care has created a weight support system to help people suffering from walking disabilities after a stroke.
The Purdue team created an alternative to traditional gait rehabilitation training, an important part of retraining the legs for proper walking after a stroke or trauma.

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Bad fat to good fat: Purdue-based startup developing technology aimed at helping treat obesity, diabetes

Imagine being able to turn bad fat into good fat inside your own body without exercising, but rather a simple injection. 
That’s the goal of technology from a Purdue University-based startup.

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An online tool to save your life? Purdue develops platform to help survive hurricanes, natural disasters

Just a few minutes of warning during a natural disaster can mean the difference between life and death.

Imagine being stuck underneath rubble after a hurricane slams landward, knocking out the emergency phone lines. What if social media could save your life? What if an online platform gave you a more accurate, detailed route of a hurricane?

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Purdue’s Ideas Festival to feature legacy, promise in cancer research during Biden initiative summit

Purdue University research experts will discuss their giant leaps in cancer research, including early detection and response to treatments, at the Purdue event of the Sept. 21 Biden Cancer Community Summit.

This is a nationwide initiative in which campuses, hospitals and community organizers host events on the same day to show the progress they are making in cancer research.

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