Scientists from the Russian city of Tomsk have announced that they have successfully built a new stent.
For blood-borne diseases such as HIV or hepatitis, it is very dangerous to use the wrong syringe used by the patient.
It sounds like the plot of a modern horror action movie, but security experts claim that many implanted medical devices can be attacked through the network, even causing death.
The World Health Organization estimates that up to three quarters of medical equipment donated from the West are completely useless in the world's poorest countries.
Recently, in the Finnish mass media, Spektikor has developed an unusual, unusual heart rate indicator.
Russian media on October 23 reported that scientists have invented a device for early diagnosis of cancer and tuberculosis.
Worried about his ailing mother, Frank Nguyen built a heart failure warning device to monitor her health remotely.
Excluding a common needle, it was inserted under the skin to put the drug in. At the top of the syringe, there was a very small auxiliary needle. It pokes in the skin first and
B-shoe is a smart shoe from a technology company in Israel, led by Dr. Yonatan Manor.
Special equipment developed by a Korean start-up promises to bring hope to people with depression in the future.