Stanford researchers have developed easyBAT, a simplified solution integrating a microfluidic sample preparation device with a fully automated analysis pipeline for rapid, accurate and accessible solution for food allergy diagnosis at the point-of-care.
Stanford scientists have developed a novel hydrogel for long-term drug delivery of an Activator Protein 1 (AP-1) inhibitor for the prevention of post-surgical abdominal adhesion.
The Longaker lab at Stanford University has recently discovered that local injection of the drug Verteporfin after wounding can reduce scarring, improve the strength of healed skin, and regrow the hair follicles and sweat glands that are usually lost during the scarring proces
Stanford inventors have developed a novel diagnostic tool that identifies distinct immune signatures in the peripheral blood of osteoarthritis patients using mass cytometry (CyTOF) and applied machine learning.
Skin wounds invariably heal by developing fibrotic scar tissue, which can result in devastating disfigurement, growth restriction and permanent functional loss.
Stanford BIODESIGN researchers have developed a disease breathalyzer for detecting necrotizing enterocolitis in newborns. Newborn babies face a high risk of blood infections (sepsis) and gastrointestinal inflammation and injury disease (necrotizing enterocolitis 'NEC').
Stanford researchers have invented a unified AI architecture that integrates foundational models (FMs) with AI techniques for efficient analysis of fMRI data in psychiatric disorders.
Stanford researchers in the Zhao Lab have designed and optimized a rotation device that can mechanically dissolve a clot for fast and complete clot retraction.
Researchers at Stanford have identified the use of the drug verteporfin to treat or reduce the risk of developing ibrosis after ocular procedures or ocular injury. Of interest is corneal injury, for example after refractive surgery or crosslinking, e.g.
Stanford researchers at the Woo Lab have designed and manufactured a flexible, compact laparoscopic device for knot tying during cardiac, thoracic, and ENT operations.