Could a microscopic "geode" of medicine be the future of eye care? A new study shows how crystalline drug delivery could ...
Rosenberg was born with oculocutaneous albinism—a genetic condition that affects the eyes, skin, and hair, causing reduced ...
How does the brain prepare to hear before birth? Johns Hopkins researchers discovered an internal neural "shortcut" that ...
It wasn’t the most direct path to becoming a materials scientist and biomedical engineer, but Younan Xia ended up in his ...
Our students and faculty are pioneering new technologies to understand how the interactions between molecules, cells, tissues, and organs maintain health and contribute to disease. Key research areas ...
Spend one year specializing in advanced BME focus areas and solving real-world engineering problems related to human health and disease through project-based courses. Spend an optional second year ...
Abstract: Our project presents an EEG based study of schizophrenia subtypes focusing on differences in treatment response. The work examines whether patterns in brain activity and functional ...
Transforming medicine, one discovery at a time. From groundbreaking medical devices to transformative new treatments, Hopkins BME researchers are engineering the future of medicine and pushing the ...
Working with “digital twins” of patients’ hearts, doctors improved cardiac ablation outcomes for patients with life-threatening arrythmias. In the first clinical trials for cardiac digital twins ...
What if doctors could stabilize blood pressure using only sound waves? Researchers at Johns Hopkins University are pioneering a way to gently “tickle” the spinal cord with ultrasound to regulate blood ...
Jordan Green, Herschel L. Seder Professor and Vice Chair for Research and Translation in the Department of Biomedical Engineering, has been named the 2026 recipient of the Clemson Award for Applied ...
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