News & events

Antigen

Technology that simulates complex molecular interactions could lead to better treatments for diseases like cancer and COVID-19

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Prof. Casim Sarkar and team designed the ‘MVsim’ app to be accessible for non-experts.

Headshot of David Odde

Computer simulator helps steer COVID-19 clinical trial toward promising treatment

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The biophysics-based model from Prof. David Odde and team simulated the disease on a molecular and cellular level so the trial team could screen potential treatments computationally long before they were given to participants. 

Two high school students interacting

BME receives national recognition for encouraging underrepresented groups to pursue STEM careers

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A high school internship program from the Department of Biomedical Engineering received the 2022 Inspiring Programs in STEM Award from INSIGHT Into Diversity magazine, the largest and oldest diversity and inclusion publication in higher education. 

Sound plus electrical body stimulation to treat chronic pain

Study finds that sound plus electrical body stimulation has potential to treat chronic pain

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A new neuromodulation technique from Professor Hubert Lim and team activated the brain’s somatosensory cortex and could potentially help those who suffer from chronic pain.

Scan of vaccines being delivered through the nose

New method of nasal vaccine delivery could lead to better vaccines for HIV and COVID-19

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Promising vaccine technology from assistant professor Brittany Hartwell and team has generated strong immune responses in mice and primates.

Person holding test tube with DNA in background

Prof. Sarkar and team develop new tool that will allow for more personalized cell therapies

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The new quantitative approach gives scientists and engineers more control over the DNA editing process.

Person handling an artificial heart valve

UMN awarded $3.7M to prepare for clinical trials of lab-created pediatric heart vessels that grow with the recipients

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Prof. Robert Tranquillo and team have received a $3.7 million grant over the next four years from the U.S. Department of Defense to prepare for a human clinical trial of artificial blood vessels bioengineered in the lab that grow with the patient.

Cancer cells

Research finds cancer cells can migrate toward certain ‘sweet spot’ environments

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Prof. David Odde and team have found that cancer cells can gravitate toward certain mechanical “sweet spot” environments, providing new insights into how cancer invades the body.

Hubert Lim

BME professor part of team that has published results of second large-scale study for tinnitus treatment

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At least 80 percent of participants experienced a reduction in their tinnitus symptoms after 12 weeks of treatment.

Carly Donahue and Sam Boland

Big wins for BME PhD students at SB3C

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BME students won two of the six divisions of the PhD student paper competition at the 2022 Summer Biomechanics, Bioengineering, and Biotransport Conference.