PRESS-NEWS.org - Press Release Distribution
PRESS RELEASES DISTRIBUTION

Blood simple circuitry for cyborgs

Simplifying cyborg circuitry using human blood

2011-03-31
(Press-News.org) Could electronic components made from human blood be the key to creating cyborg interfaces? Circuitry that links human tissues and nerve cells directly to an electronic device, such as a robotic limb or artificial eye might one day be possible thanks to the development of biological components.

Writing in the International Journal of Medical Engineering and Informatics, a team in India describes how a "memristor" can be made using human blood. Memristors were a theoretical electronic component first suggested in 1971 by Berkeley electrical engineer Leon Chua and finally developed in the laboratory by scientists at Hewlett Packard using titanium dioxide in 2008. A memristor is a passive device, like a resistor, with two terminals but rather than having a fixed electrical resistance, its ability to carry a current changes depending on the voltage applied previously; it retains a memory of the current, in other words.

There are countless patents linking the development of memristors to applications in programmable logic circuits, as components of future transistors, in signal processing and in neural networks. S.P. Kosta of the Education Campus Changa in Gujarat and colleagues have now explored the possibility of creating a liquid memristor from human blood. In parallel work they are investigating diodes and capacitors composed of liquid human tissues.

They constructed the laboratory-based biological memristor using a 10 ml test tube filled with human blood held at 37 Celsius into which two electrodes are inserted; appropriate measuring instrumentation was attached. The experimental memristor shows that resistance varies with applied voltage polarity and magnitude and this memory effect is sustained for at least five minutes in the device.

Having demonstrated memristor behavior in blood, the next step was to test that the same behavior would be observed in a device through which blood is flowing. This step was also successful. The next stage will be to develop a micro-channel version of the flow memristor device and to integrate several to carry out particular logic functions. This research is still a long way from an electronic to biological interface, but bodes well for the development of such devices in the future.

### "Human blood liquid memristor" in Int. J. Medical Engineering and Informatics, 2011, 3, 16-29


ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:

Mucus: Fighting the war against pollutants

2011-03-31
Are our bodies vulnerable to some pollutants whose lack of solubility in water, or "hydrophobicity," has always been thought to protect us from them? New Tel Aviv University research has discovered that this is indeed the case. Studies by Dr. Michael Gozin of Tel Aviv University's School of Chemistry at the Raymond and Beverly Sackler Faculty of Exact Sciences and Dr. Dan Peer of TAU's Laboratory of Nanomedicine in the Department of Cell Research and Immunology have revealed that mucus — the thick substance lining those internal bodily organs that come into contact with ...

Nevada Reconsiders the Use of Red-Light Cameras

2011-03-31
In 1999, the Nevada legislature passed a law banning the use of cameras to catch traffic violations at intersections. However, North Las Vegas is now pushing to change that law to allow the use of cameras to go after those running red lights. The current legislative bill to make the change has garnered the support of the Nevada Department of Transportation and the Nevada Sheriff's and Chief's Association. However, it is not without opposition. The Case For and Against Cameras Red light cameras work by videoing or photographing cars that do not stop for red lights. ...

A new method to localize the epileptic focus in severe epilepsy

2011-03-31
The first two stereo-EEG explorations in Finland were carried out by neurosurgeons of the Epilepsy surgery team in Helsinki University Central Hospital this spring. The method reinforces other examination methods already in use and opens an excellent opportunity in the exploration of the electric activity of both the surface and the deep brain structures during epileptic seizures. The examination also enables exact localization of the functionally important areas of the brain and improves safety of epilepsy surgery at a later stage. The stereo-EEG examination was developed ...

Case study reports singing lowers patient's blood pressure prior to surgery

2011-03-31
Doctors report that singing reduced the blood pressure of a 76-year-old woman who had experienced severe preoperative hypertension prior to total knee replacement surgery for osteoarthritis (OA). While the patient was unresponsive to aggressive pharmacologic interventions, the woman's blood pressure dropped dramatically when she sang several religious songs. This case-report appears in the April issue of Arthritis Care & Research, a journal published by Wiley-Blackwell on behalf of the American College of Rheumatology (ACR). Traditional therapy for preoperative hypertension, ...

Next Round in Fight over Entergy Ruling Expected This Year

2011-03-31
When the Texas Supreme Court upheld the ruling in the Entergy case on rehearing in 2009, it was a huge win for property owners to the detriment of injured workers. The failure of the state legislature to pass a law overturning the Entergy decision that same year seemed to signal defeat for those hoping to protect the rights of injured contract workers to fair compensation for their injuries. However, the fight over third-party liability for workplace injuries in Texas appears to be far from over. With the Workers' Compensation Division up for their sunset review this ...

KIT presents innovations at the 2011 Hannover Messe

KIT presents innovations at the 2011 Hannover Messe
2011-03-31
This release is available in German. Innovations relating to mobility, energy, bionics, and nano- and microtechnologies will be presented by KIT at the 2011 Hannover Messe from April 4 – 8. At its stand (Hall 2, stand C18), KIT will present a hybrid Porsche racing car, developments in battery research, materials and processes for printable electronics, the KIC InnoEnergy for a European energy supply system, and the Energy Solution Center (EnSoC) competence network. Moreover, KIT contributes to other stands and special exhibitions. KIT main stand, hall 2, (Research ...

'Spincasting' holds promise for creation of nanoparticle thin films

Spincasting holds promise for creation of nanoparticle thin films
2011-03-31
Researchers from North Carolina State University have investigated the viability of a technique called "spincasting" for creating thin films of nanoparticles on an underlying substrate – an important step in the creation of materials with a variety of uses, from optics to electronics. Spincasting, which utilizes centrifugal force to distribute a liquid onto a solid substrate, already has a variety of uses. For example, it is used in the electronics industry to deposit organic thin films on silicon wafers to create transistors. For this study, the researchers first dispersed ...

NHTSA Proposing to Require Back-Up Cameras in All Cars

2011-03-31
A key federal safety agency has proposed a new rule that would require all new vehicles to have back-up cameras by 2014. The National Highway Traffic Safety Administration is seeking to implement a 2007 Act of Congress that directed NHTSA to amend the federal motor vehicle safety standard on rearview mirrors. The rule change is designed to improve the ability of a driver to detect pedestrians in the area immediately behind his or her vehicle and minimize the likelihood of a vehicle's running over a pedestrian while its driver is backing the vehicle. The proposed rule ...

New York Case Shows Dangers of Cosmetic Silicone Injections

2011-03-31
The quest to measure up to society's beauty ideals through cosmetic surgery can pose grave risks when the surgery is not done right. Improperly planned or performed surgery can lead to disfigurement and even death. Even more shocking, recently it has been discovered that unlicensed providers inject people with silicone and other illicit substances, including paraffin, petroleum jelly and hydrogel. Even a licensed provider can commit surgical errors if the operation was not properly planned and carried out. Many people know that medical malpractice law exists to compensate ...

URI scientist discovers 54 beneficial compounds in pure maple syrup

2011-03-31
KINGSTON, R.I. – March 30, 2011 – University of Rhode Island researcher Navindra Seeram has discovered 34 new beneficial compounds in pure maple syrup and confirmed that 20 compounds discovered last year in preliminary research play a key role in human health. Today at the 241st American Chemical Society's National Meeting in Anaheim, Calif. the URI assistant pharmacy professor is telling scientists from around the world that his URI team has now isolated and identified 54 beneficial compounds in pure maple syrup from Quebec, five of which have never been seen in nature. ...

LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:

Risk of cardiovascular disease linked to long-term exposure to arsenic in community water supplies

Taking the “vibrational fingerprints” of molecules got 100 times faster

Gardens prevent pollinators from starving when farmland nectar is scarce, new study finds

Addiction treatment decreases suicide risk among people with opioid dependence

Abundant urban green space linked to lower rates of heat related illness and death

Lifetime sudden cardiac death risk 4+ times higher for those with schizophrenia

Scurvy may be re-emerging amid cost of living crisis and rise of weight loss surgery

Ethical framework aims to counter risks of geoengineering research

New AI tool set to be a “game changer” in improving outcome predictions for kidney transplant patients

New VUMC hospital expansion to be named Jim Ayers Tower

New drug, WNTinib, delays tumor growth and improves survival in mouse models of children’s liver cancer

Clinical study confirms tissue stiffening in breast cancer can drive metastasis

Medicare has a revolving door, study suggests

Floor swabbing could help prevent COVID-19 outbreaks in hospitals

Paws of polar bears sustaining ice-related injuries in a warming Arctic

Politics may influence gift-giving choices more than personal purchases

Listening skills bring human-like touch to robots

Acclaimed WVU doctor and researcher elected to National Academy of Medicine

New study reveals larger insects' critical role in decomposition in arid ecosystems

NASA reveals prototype telescope for gravitational wave observatory

A new kind of authoritarianism: Democracy in decline at home and abroad

Performance in physical tests can help manage treatment for metastatic lung cancer

Expanding access to weight-loss drugs could save thousands of lives a year

Harnessing science to tackle global crises

Caltech's new fingerprint mass spectrometry method paves the way to solving the proteome

Invasive flathead catfish impacting Susquehanna’s food chain, researchers find

Javadi receives DOE Early Career Award to study qubit hosts

Obesity Medicine Fellowship created at Pennington Biomedical

Structural biology analysis of a Pseudomonas bacterial virus reveals a genome ejection motor

Remote tool developed to helped detect autism and developmental delay in children with limited access to specialists

[Press-News.org] Blood simple circuitry for cyborgs
Simplifying cyborg circuitry using human blood