Home » Markets » Medical Electronics (page 30)

Medical Electronics

Content related to medical electronics

Transparent movement sensor printed into clothing

csm_FraunhoferISC_transparent_printed_sensor_22fb682c1c-300x200.jpg

In what looks like a breakthrough in wearable technology Fraunhofer ISC in Germany has developed a transparent sensor material which can be printed onto textiles. The material will be presented on IDTechEX Europe at booth F16 in the Estrel Berlin on 27 and 28 April 2016. The new sensor technology will be incorporated into a prototype shirt. This so-called MONI ...

Leti signs deal to bring medical device tech to market

Marie-Semeria-Leti-300x200.jpg

Leti, the French semiconductor tech centre, is working with ARaymondlife, a device manufacturer for the IVD industry, to develop medical devices, especially in the field of microfluidic cartridge analysis. The aim is to create portable bio-med systems which can reduced the cost of sample analysis. Leti CEO Marie Semeria, writes: “This partnership combines our competencies in ways that will significantly ...

PWM motor control has precision for surgical drills

Patch_pump_c948cb1430.jpg

Motor control algorithm which detects the rotor position at standstill, with different pulse width modulation control allows the motor to be controlled independently of the applied mechanical load, writes Richard Wilson Miniature drills are used in medical applications but they have very particular requirements. They must not produce carbon dust or electrical sparks. But more importantly they need to be ...

Graphene used for brain electrode in Parkinson treatment

09mar16graphene-300x200.png

Researchers in the UK and Italy believe a breakthrough in treatment of motor disorders, such as epilepsy or Parkinson’s disease, may be possible and with electronic neuron interface devices fabricated from pure graphene, writes Richard Wilson. Treatment of patients with motor disorders such as Parkinson’s disease could one day benefit from graphene, the highly conductive material which is expected to ...

Canon bags up Toshiba Medical for $6bn

image-300x200.jpeg

Scandal-stricken Toshiba is selling its medical unit to Canon in a bid to raise cash. The deal is expected to raise about $6 billion. Canon now gains exclusive negotiating rights for Toshiba Medical Systems Corporation after winning a hotly contested auction. Fujifilm and Konica Minolta teamed up with private equity firm Permira to make an unsuccessful bid. Toshiba Medical is ...

Recom offers 65W supply certified for medical apps

RACM40-RACM65-200-2.gif

Recom has added to its medical-certified power supply offering with the RACM40 (40W) and RACM65 (65W) units. Both of the series operate with an input voltage range of 85 to 264Vac and deliver 5Vdc, 12Vdc, 15Vdc, 24Vdc and 48Vdc output voltages, which can be trimmed over a ±10% range to meet the exact requirements of the application. All models feature ...

Imec ECG readout IC enables low-cost, low-power medical SoCs

image-300x200.jpeg

Imec, Holst Centre and TNO, have presented a 0.6V ECG readout chip in 40nm technology based on time-domain circuit techniques. The chip maintains consistent beat detection capabilities, even under movement (~40mVpp), paving the way to a low cost, low power multi-sensor SoC solutions for wearable medical applications. There is a clear need for emerging applications in personal healthcare to add ...

Electronics patent of the month: The problem of spurious monitored signals

BD-300x200.jpg

This month features the problem of spurious monitored signals in hospitals, which comes up in CareFusion Corporation’s GB patent. Michael Jaeger, patent attorney at leading UK patent and trade mark attorneys Withers & Rogers LLP, writes: GB Patent Number: GB2476862 Granted to: CareFusion Corporation I’ve certainly overheard some interesting discussions between my children recently… “I don’t like drinking water” my daughter ...

Kyoto University and Canon reduce cost of MRI scanner to one tenth

image15-300x200.jpg

Canon and Kyoto University have developed technology that will reduce the price of an MRI scanner machine to a tenth of their current cost, reports the Nikkei. MRI machines currently cost between $4 million and $8 million. Canon’s technology is reducing that to $400,000 to $800,000. Smaller and more affordable MRI scanners will make cancer screenings easier and more widespread ...

Breakthrough for video-pill cancer imaging

srep18591-f1-300x200.jpg

Researchers from the University of Glasgow claim to have found a way to make swallowable cameras which can be used for detecting cancers of the throat and gut. Tiny sensing systems small enough for patients to swallow have been used by doctors but these devices have relied on additional illumination with a separate light source and have been restricted to ...