Posts Tagged ‘Heart Failure’

Newfangled nanoscale scanning technique could improve heart health

Newfangled nanoscale scanning technique could improve heart health
Oh, nanotechnology — your wonders never cease. Boffins at Imperial College London have been able to use live nanoscale microscopy (a technique called scanning ion conductance microscopy) in order to see the surface of the cardiac muscle cell at more detailed levels than those possible using conventional live microscopy. Without getting too gross on you, the new process could lead to improved designs of beta-blockers, the drugs that can retard the development of heart failure. Researchers are hoping that the findings could also lead to “improvements in current therapeutic approaches to treating heart failure and abnormal heart rhythms,” and while these exceptionally detailed images are helping the cardiac muscle right now, we’re hoping that this stuff could also bleed over to other fields of medicine. Ventricles crossed!

Newfangled nanoscale scanning technique could improve heart health originally appeared on Engadget on Sat, 27 Feb 2010 11:29:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

Permalink Physorg  |  sourceImperial College London  | Email this | Comments
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CHF Technologies brings in $360K for heart failure treatments

CHF Technologies brings in $360K for heart failure treatments

CHF Technologies, a company that develops surgical equipment to treat congestive heart failure, has raised $360,000 of an expected $10.8 million round of debt and equity, according to a filing with the SEC. The San Ramon, Calif. company has previously been backed by Telegraph Hill Partners.



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