Mayo Clinic researchers have developed a pioneering method to mend damaged hearts without open-heart surgery, an advance that could one day transform the treatment of heart failure.
Microplastics are turning up everywhere, but some scientists say how harmful they are to our bodies is still uncertain.
Interesting Engineering on MSN
End of brain surgery? Injectable chips self-implant to treat brain disease safely
If successful, circulatronics could transform treatment for conditions once deemed untreatable, from brain cancer to chronic ...
Disney implemented a price hike on Oct. 21. A Disney Plus subscription now costs $12 per month for the ad-supported version and $19 per month, or $190 per year, for the ad-free version. Existing ...
Materials scientists at the University of Minnesota Twin Cities have found a way to create and control tiny "flaws" inside ...
AI-powered mattresses, lawnmowing robots, flying cameras—2026 is the year that gear went from Ridley Scott movie to reality. Our team of 10 editors spent a nine months testing more than 150 high-tech ...
Tribune Content Agency on MSN
Scientists use nanotechnology to turn chemotherapy drug into cancer super cure
Scientists at Northwestern University in Evanston, Illinois, have used nanotechnology to re-engineer the molecular structure ...
Motorola Edge 70 debuts globally with 5.99mm slim body, 1.5K 120Hz pOLED, Snapdragon 7 Gen 4, triple 50MP cameras, and 68W fast charging.
What if clinicians could place tiny electronic chips in the brain that electrically stimulate a precise target, through a ...
The Ploopy Nano 2 has a PAW-3222 sensor with a 1,000 Hz polling rate and a default setting of 1,000 CPI (counts per inch), but support for up to 4,000 CPI.
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