ZME Science on MSN
Scientists Test Tiny Injectable Brain Chips That Could Treat Brain Disorders Without Invasive Surgery
Even newer “minimally invasive” ideas, like stent-mounted electrodes deployed through blood vessels, still require a catheter ...
I Went Public About My Struggles With Diarrhea. The Response Was Overwhelming. “Yet, the surgery left me with four ...
Sharjah, United Arab Emirates – XCath, a medical device company dedicated to pioneering neuro-endovascular surgical robotics, ...
Doctors from Scotland and the US have completed what is thought to be a world-first stroke procedure using a robot. Prof Iris Grunwald, of the University of Dundee, performed the remote thrombectomy - ...
London - The doctors prepared to carry out the brain surgery, their medical tools laid out. Their patient, wide awake on the operating table, was given an instrument of her own: her clarinet, which ...
Barney Hewitt suffered a “violent seizure” on his 25th birthday, during which he ruptured a lung and broke both of his ...
A rare glimpse into the brain activity of a patient with obesity and loss of control eating on tirzepatide, marketed as ...
A first-in-human study suggests that tirzepatide modulates abnormal activity in the brain’s nucleus accumbens, reducing food ...
Morning Overview on MSN
Scientists test tiny brain chips to treat disorders without surgery
Tiny electronic chips that can be threaded into the brain through a needle instead of a scalpel are moving from speculative ...
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