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Next-generation spinal implants help people with severe paralysis walk, cycle, and swim

Next-generation spinal implants help people with severe paralysis walk, cycle, and swim
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University of Alberta: Invention is designed to switch thoughts into action

Imagine children with severe mobility issues being able to move their wheelchairs with their minds. That’s the idea behind a new brain-computer interface being developed by researchers at the University of Alberta and University of Calgary.Think2Swit

New laser microfabrication suite at U of A offers researchers sharper lab equipment

  EDMONTON New microfabrication tools will give medical technology developers at the University of Alberta a boost. The laser equipment will allow inventors across Western Canada to design and test precision medical devices at rapid speeds, according to a release from the U of A. Developers will now have access to $1.5 million in new laser-based equipment at Smart Technology Innovations (ST), a non-profit business arm of the U of A’s SMART Network thanks to a new investment from Western Economic Diversification Canada (WD). Prototypes can now be designed and tested using the laser microfabrication suite, the release said. This could include everything from medical implants to lab-on-a-chip technology in a fraction of the time it takes with traditional methods.

New laser equipment at University of Alberta gives medical technology developers boost

In the world of precision medicine, really, really small is a really big deal. That’s certainly the case for western Canadian entrepreneurs who have big ideas for tiny medical devices, thanks to a new investment from Western Economic Diversification Canada (WD) in a University of Alberta facility. Medical device developers now have access to $1.5 million in new laser-based microfabrication equipment at Smart Technology (ST) Innovations, the non-profit business arm of the U of A’s SMART (Sensory Motor Adaptive Rehabilitation Technology) Network. The new equipment known as a laser microfabrication suite allows inventors to design and test prototypes for everything from medical implants to lab-on-a-chip technology in a fraction of the time it takes with traditional methods. 

Laser-based microfabrication equipment at U of A gives medical device developers a boost

Author of the article: Lauren Boothby Publishing date: Aug 03, 2021  •  3 hours ago  •  2 minute read  •  Michel Gauthier, research associate and chief engineer, demonstrates a nanosecond laser micromachining station at the University of Alberta, in Edmonton Tuesday Aug. 3, 2021. Medical device developers now have access to $1.5 million in new laser-based microfabrication equipment at the University of Alberta s Smart Technology Innovations. Photo by David Bloom Photo by David Bloom David Bloom /David Bloom/Postmedia Article content The University of Alberta hopes a new set of $1.5-million laser equipment capable of making microscopic cuts and welds will lead to big innovations in health and medical technology in Western Canada.

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