Researchers develop electronic stethoscope, analytics to aid lung diagnoses

Japanese researchers have developed a highly sensitive electronic stethoscope to record and then analyze patient breathing sounds for diagnosis into 5 common categories.  A team of three physicians from Hiroshima University and Fukushima Medical University developed the system in collaboration with corporate partner Pioneer.

Report: Women have fewer procedures after heart attack than men

Amid a growing body of research on heart health devices and blood pressure monitoring, a new report from Blue Cross Blue Shield shows that women undergo fewer diagnostic procedures and treatments following a heart attack than men.

Vaginal ring shields some women from HIV in NIH-backed study

A large study funded by the National Institutes of Health (NIH) found that a drug-delivering vaginal ring could protect some women against HIV.  The results come on the heels of more promising data, which show that the ring device can reduce women’s risk of developing the infection.

Swiss scientists roll out low-cost portable diagnostic for Ebola

Scientists are racing to develop quick diagnostic devices that can screen for potentially deadly diseases in developing countries.  Now, some researchers moved one step forward in the field with a portable microfluidic device that can screen for the Ebola virus.

Nature Biotech: Researchers 3-D print functional ear, bone and muscle structures

Scientists from Wake Forest Baptist Medical Center have proven that they can 3-D print living tissue structures, including ear, bone and muscle, which may be used to replace tissue on human patients.  The research team published a paper in the journal Nature Biotechnology showing that they were able to 3-D print human-scale tissues and then effectively implant them in mice to result in vascularized, functional tissue.

FDA releases guidance on improving medical device interoperability

Interoperability is an increasingly important component of med tech, due to the need for communication and data exchange within a networked system of other devices, electronic health records and clinicians.  Poor interoperability is blamed for problems like “alarm fatigue” whereby poorly networked devices produce an excessive number of loud warnings out of an abundance of caution, leading to the risk that a necessary alarm will be ignored.

Mayo Clinic dispatches UV-emitting robots to fight drug-resistant bacteria

With superbug infections proliferating at U.S. healthcare facilities, hospitals are looking for new ways to eliminate potentially deadly bacteria. Mayo Clinic is jumping on the bandwagon, rolling out bacteria-fighting robots that use UV light to kill C. difficile.