Johns Hopkins biomedical engineers have mapped the bone's nerve network in 3D, providing the roadmap for faster recovery.
Imagine if after a serious accident, your damaged facial bones could be replaced with tissue made by your own cells. Or if you could pop a pill that could reprogram your immune system to fight a ...
Implantable medical devices–think artificial joints, cochlear implants, and insulin pumps–make some of our most challenging health issues more manageable. Even so, human bodies frequently reject ...
Transforming medicine, one discovery at a time. From groundbreaking medical devices to transformative new treatments, Hopkins BME researchers are engineering the future of medicine and pushing the ...
The Johns Hopkins biomedical engineering graduate programs have earned the No.1 ranking from U.S. News & World Report, marking more than 30 consecutive years at the top spot, according to the new 2024 ...
A new AI model is much better than doctors at identifying patients likely to experience cardiac arrest. The linchpin is the system’s ability to analyze long-underused heart imaging, alongside a full ...
Researchers at Johns Hopkins University have identified key brain regions involved in associating sounds with specific behaviors. Published in Cell Reports, the new study offers insight into how the ...
Johns Hopkins Medicine researchers are collaborating with NASA to send human heart “tissue-on-a-chip” specimens into space as early as March. The project is designed to monitor the tissue for changes ...
The Johns Hopkins Biomedical Engineering graduate programs have, once again, been ranked No. 1 in the nation by U.S. News & World Report according to the 2025 rankings released today. This marks 33 ...
Explore a glimpse into the future of medicine through the latest research from Hopkins BME. This page provides a curated selection of our most recent publications, spanning a wide range of topics and ...
Johns Hopkins University researchers have grown a novel whole-brain organoid, complete with neural tissues and rudimentary blood vessels—an advance that could usher in a new era of research into ...
Amputees often experience the sensation of a “phantom limb”—a feeling that a missing body part is still there. That sensory illusion is closer to becoming a reality thanks to a team of engineers at ...