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Articles in the Medicine Category

Scientists Might Make A Pill That’ll Give You Photographic Memory [Memory Forever]
Tuesday, 16 Mar, 2010 – 21:40 | No Comment
Scientists Might Make A Pill That’ll Give You Photographic Memory [Memory Forever]

Researchers have discovered that increasing production of a protein called RGS-14 could significantly boost visual memory . They are currently investigating the exact effects on humans, but all I can think is: Photographic memory in pill form. More

Photographic Memory (In Pill Form) [Memory Forever]
Tuesday, 16 Mar, 2010 – 21:40 | No Comment
Photographic Memory (In Pill Form) [Memory Forever]

Researchers have discovered that increasing production of a protein called RGS-14 could significantly boost visual memory . They are currently investigating the exact effects on humans, but all I can think is: Photographic memory in pill form. More

Photographic Memory (In Pill Form) [Memory Forever]
Tuesday, 16 Mar, 2010 – 21:40 | No Comment
Photographic Memory (In Pill Form) [Memory Forever]

Researchers have discovered that increasing production of a protein called RGS-14 could significantly boost visual memory . They are currently investigating the exact effects on humans, but all I can think is: Photographic memory in pill form. More

Miniature Paper Laboratory Diagnoses Diseases With Colors [Medicine]
Saturday, 6 Mar, 2010 – 17:00 | No Comment
Miniature Paper Laboratory Diagnoses Diseases With Colors [Medicine]

Costing just a cent to produce and requiring just a single drop of blood, this paper chip, designed by Harvard chemist George Whitesides, can diagnose HIV, tuberculosis, malaria and more. What substance makes this tiny marvel possible? Comic-book ink. The water-resistant ink pushes the blood into the different paper channels, each of which contain chemicals that react with the blood and change color to indicate the presence and severity of the various diseases.

Miniature Paper Laboratory Diagnoses Diseases With Comic-Book Colors [Medicine]
Saturday, 6 Mar, 2010 – 17:00 | No Comment
Miniature Paper Laboratory Diagnoses Diseases With Comic-Book Colors [Medicine]

Costing just a cent to produce and requiring just a single drop of blood to function, this paper chip, designed by chemist George Whitesides, can diagnose HIV, tuberculosis, malaria and more. What substance makes this tiny marvel possible? Comic-book ink. The water-resistant ink pushes the blood into the different paper channels, each of which contain chemicals that react with the blood and change color to indicate the presence and severity of the various diseases. In developing countries where technology for diagnosing diseases needs to be cheap and easy for individuals to use themselves, it’s hard to imagine a test simpler than Whitesides’ “zero cost diagnostics”.

Wheelchair Blitzkrieg [Concepts]
Wednesday, 3 Mar, 2010 – 14:55 | No Comment
Wheelchair Blitzkrieg [Concepts]

The Zenith wheelchair , a design by the Mechanical Engineering Department at the University of Alberta, is fit with tank-like treads to climb up stairs under the user’s own power. The treaded design combines with strong, lightweight tech like an aluminum back frame and a Herman Miller-inspired carbon fiber seat to create a beastly machine that’s not too cumbersome to actually wield. Still, if the design actually works—there’s no working prototype yet—we have to wonder: Why didn’t everyone put tank treads on wheelchairs already? And why the heck is Johnny 5 receiving better medical care than the citizens of humanity? [ thedesignblog via coroflot via io9 ]

TV and Internet Are Turning Teenagers Into Loners [Emotions]
Monday, 1 Mar, 2010 – 22:00 | No Comment
TV and Internet Are Turning Teenagers Into Loners [Emotions]

A new study found a direct link between the time teenagers spent staring at screens and their inability to have meaningful relationships with their parents and peers. This study obviously was conducted before that Russian kid blessed us with Chatroulette. You’ve likely been at one end of this debate—either you were a teenage TV zombie being told by your parents to go play outside, or you were that parent trying to keep your kid from spending another mindless hour on the Internet. In this battle, it turns out, the wisdom of age prevails. The study, published in this month’s Archives of Pediatrics & Adolescent Medicine, found that every hour of TV watched increased the teen’s likelihood of detachment from friends and family 4% and each hour of Internet increased it 5%

Casttoo X-Ray Cast Wraps Replace Pity with Awe [X-rays]
Wednesday, 24 Feb, 2010 – 12:20 | No Comment
Casttoo X-Ray Cast Wraps Replace Pity with Awe [X-rays]

I’ve never had the pleasure of breaking a bone, but if I did, you can bet I’d be wearing a Casttoo to share my innermost threshold for pain with the world. Casttoos are customizable cast decals. You email in the image of your choice—yes, X-rays work great, though a shattered Terminator endoskeleton might be a valid secondary option—and they’ll mail you out a decal that can be affixed via hairdryer. Prices range anywhere from $20-$40, but hopefully, if you’re on decent pain meds at the time, you’ll have no issues shrugging off the small purchase. [ Castoos via bookofjoe via DVICE ]

Stethoscope iPhone App Lets You Play Doctor—Or Nurse, If You Prefer [IPhone Apps]
Wednesday, 24 Feb, 2010 – 4:16 | No Comment
Stethoscope iPhone App Lets You Play Doctor—Or Nurse, If You Prefer [IPhone Apps]

Playing doctor and nurse used to be so affordable as a kid. Nowadays, you need to fork out $69.99 for an iPhone app, and $279.99 for a stethoscope. Still, you can’t put a price on saving lives, right? Not that you’ll be saving too many lives with just a stethoscope and an app that displays the heartbeat in its arty, wiggly form. But you can record the sound of a heartbeat, and even email it to your doctor if you’re particularly worried

How Roger Ebert Will Get His Voice Back [Lifechanger]
Thursday, 18 Feb, 2010 – 13:56 | No Comment
How Roger Ebert Will Get His Voice Back [Lifechanger]

Years of battling cancer have left film ubercritic Roger Ebert without a portion of his jaw, and consequentially, his voice. Esquire ’s superb profile outlined his efforts to regain a voice—his voice—but left us wondering: How will that work? From Esquire : Ebert is waiting for a Scottish company called CereProc to give him some of his former voice back. He found it on the Internet, where he spends a lot of his time.