August 29th, 2008 by
Filed under: Household
The age of the house call is long gone, and until we manage to replace all our bodily organs with cybernetic proxies, medical gadgets are our only hope to minimize those pesky office visits. The Health PHS5000 (aka Dr. Touch) from LG and Intel isn’t the first of its kind, but it is the latest such device, and it’s been recently introduced exclusively in Japan to begin medical trials. The little white box with a friendly UI (smileys mean you’re not dead yet, we presume) can track things like blood pressure and sugar levels, and will even send reports to your doctor’s office — meaning your terminal laziness can reach astronomical new heights… er, lows. It’s perfect for the disabled or merely reclusive, and with any luck will be hacked soon to allow Wii Fit integration.
Read | Permalink | Email this | Comments


Posted in Intel, lg, healthcare, doctor, dr touch, DrTouch, health care, hmo, Intel Health PHS5000, IntelHealthPhs5000 | No Comments »
August 20th, 2008 by
Filed under: Misc. Gadgets
In operating rooms today, cancer surgeons are essentially forced to operate without any definitive way of determining whether or not 100% of the diseased tissue has been removed. Thanks to a radical invention by researchers in Massachusetts, that huge limitation could soon be a thing of the past. A new system, dubbed FLARE (Fluorescence-Assisted Resection and Exploration), involves a near-infrared (NIR) imaging system, a video monitor, and a computer. These tools are used to see special chemical dies (christened NIR fluorophores) that are crafted to “target specific structures such as cancer cells when injected into patients.” When these dyes are exposed to NIR light, the cancer cells light up, giving doctors an easy look at what they have left to remove. The team is gearing up to showcase the technology at the American Chemical Society national meeting in Philadelphia — here’s hoping it can be put to good use in the very near future.
Read | Permalink | Email this | Comments


Posted in research, health, medical, surgery, tissue, cancer, Massachusetts, doctor, surgeon, FLARE | No Comments »
March 23rd, 2008 by
Filed under: Robots
Eye-controlled interfaces are far from revolutionary, but giving one of the world’s most famous robotic surgeons the ability to interpret eye movements is most definitely a huge leap forward in the pursuit of making operations less invasive. Reportedly, British researchers have implemented new software into the Da Vinci robosurgeon in order to enable human surgeons to “sit at a viewing console directing the movement of the robot’s mechanical arms inside the patient’s body.” Additionally, the program can track eye movements and “build up a 3D map of the area of tissue the surgeon is looking at,” and it seems as if the developments could eventually be used on a variety of other ER-based robots. Just make sure your doctor chugs a couple of Red Bulls before putting you under — wouldn’t want those eyes wandering aimlessly, now would we? (Psst, “no-go zones” are included, thankfully.)
[Via Slashdot]
Read | Permalink | Email this | Comments


Posted in health, medical, eye, robot surgery, RobotSurgery, davinci, da vinci, doctor, eye-controlled, robosurgeon | No Comments »