Stanford Device Cools Body Inside Out 44
polished look 2 writes "This is a way cool invention: Those bright, eager scientists at Stanford invented a device that cools the body by drawing the blood to an extremity (such as the hand) and pulling the heat away it - thus the blood becomes cooler which is then re-circulated through the body. The net effect is that the entire body is cooled via this relativly small device."
Human Heat Pipe (Score:1)
Also, why the hell didn't anyone think of this already? Seems pretty obvious to me.
Re:Human Heat Pipe (Score:1)
Well since this is one of the ways organisms, including humans, cool themselves, yeah, I think it is obvious. Elephants do it with their ears. What did these guys major in, Applied Obviousness?
Cool (Score:1)
Plug in Baby. (Score:3, Funny)
Re:Plug in Baby. (Score:4, Funny)
Re:Plug in Baby. (Score:1)
Re:Plug in Baby. (Score:2)
You could take peoples excess heat and use it somehow
Idea: Put programmers under intense deadlines, generate heat (warming the building) and perspiration (could be used to cool processors). Another possible useful output of the human body would be excrement and urine as ejected. This can be easily spontaneously created by doubling the workload and halving the schedule.
And you know babies whose craniums haven't yet stitched together yet? When they get aggravated, the brain pumps up and down through th
Re:Plug in Baby. (Score:2)
Technically, from the outside - in (Score:3, Insightful)
Neat, but not revolutionary.
too many possibilities (Score:3, Funny)
- That's cool
- Do we get to pick the body part? I'm thinking: this and a bottle of Viagra.
- Imagine a Beowulf cluster of these?
- In Russia...
Ok, not that many...
Re:too many possibilities (Score:2)
Is this really new? (Score:5, Insightful)
If you spend any amount of time in an ice bath, you can feel this effect, as well. Actually, it's rather unpleasant to feel the cold blood travelling back up your legs (but that's an extreme case).
I'll go RTFA now to check, but are they really talking about anything different?
As a side note -- for runners, it would seem to make sense to try cooling down the major arteries leading into the legs, but somehow I don't remember anyone pouring the ice or cold water into their groin.
Okay (Score:4, Interesting)
Another side-note: apparently Stanford has already licensed the technology, "to AVAcore Technologies Inc., an Ann Arbor, Mich., firm that Grahn and Heller founded to develop the device for commercial application."
I wonder if they're planning on testing using some of the UMich sports teams here (I live in Ann Arbor)... Football especially is HUGE here -- the whole city practically shuts down on football Saturdays like today. The stadium has a greater capacity than the city population, and no parking, so as you can imagine it's chaos. I'm sure the Wolverines wouldn't mind the little boost during training that this might provide.
Re:Is this really new? (Score:2)
Re:Is this really new? (Score:2)
Transylvanians in Romania have been beating summer heat this way for several centuries.
Re:Is this really new? (Score:2)
I invented something like this one summer (Score:5, Funny)
I don't recommend this cooler device for long distance driving.
Re:I invented something like this one summer (Score:2)
I live in central Ohio and I'm seeing more and more of those yellow/red plates...
Re:I invented something like this one summer (Score:2)
All they did was do this technically and put the person next to an air conditioner, really.
As an aside, this is the reason you don't want liquor when you're battling the cold - St. Bernards should have their flasks filled with wine instead, which has the opposite eff
Sounds dangerous to me! (Score:1)
Re:Sounds dangerous to me! (Score:2)
Re:Sounds dangerous to me! (Score:1)
Re:Sounds dangerous to me! (Score:2)
Well, it'll cool one body, but often have the effect of heating up several others. (At least if you cool the right body)
Preventing heatstroke and heat exhaustion (Score:5, Interesting)
- Athletic departments of colleges, high schools, etc; every summer, especially when football programs start up, students are taken to the hospital due to heat exhaustion and heat stroke
- Emergency Medical Response teams
- Anywhere where workers are required to be outdoors during the heat of the day
On average, 29 people a year die of heatstroke in Arizona [azdhs.gov] alone. (That doesn't include the illegal immigration deaths, of which were 172 [azcentral.com] documented so far in 2004, probably more all told.) Something like this could be very useful, commercially, it just depends on how practical and expensive it would be.
DUPE! (kinda) (Score:4, Informative)
Only difference is this time they're trying to cool people off, while before it was to keep them warm. Seriously, the previous idea was better (simpler concept, cheaper, etc) though it should be used to cool people off rather than keep them warm.
Those Stanford boys should read slashdot more often.
Re:DUPE! (kinda) (Score:2)
Re:DUPE! (kinda) (Score:2)
That article is about moving heat from the upper-arms (near the torso) to the cold hands (assuming that the individual is in a cold climate of course). It is not the same as this invention, however, as this is like a tiny air-condition for one human body - the heat is moved away from the body similar to what an air-conditioner does. If you look in the photo in the article, you shall see a light-blue tube extending down from the device which I suppose contains some kind of liquid like freon that moves heat w
In soviet Russia.... (Score:2, Interesting)
Not really. (Score:2)
Science Catches Up With Home Remedies (Score:3, Interesting)
Laid on the couch with an arm hanging off the side a and wrapped my hand in a cloth that also held ice cubes. It worked. Or I would freeze a compress and lay it on my head.
So instead of a 'subatmospheric pressure environment' I used gravity. And instead of using a special water pumping coil I used, a washcloth and ice. Sure there was bit of a mess, but that was fixed by a mixing bowl.
Last time I listen to anyone who says I'm not good enough for Stanford
Re:Science Catches Up With Home Remedies (Score:3, Funny)
Hmm... (Score:1)
'Pedaeration, n. The perfect temperature achieved by keeping one leg under the covers and one leg hanging out the bed.'
My personal improvement on pedaeration is to put it under the fitted sheet so it directly contacts the waterbed (waterbed required). Most effective.
The implementation is the news (Score:1)
They've created a device which creates a low pressure around the hand. This causes the blood to be drawn the surface of the hand, which in turn increases the cooling effect.
The chilled blood then absorbs heat from the body as it travels back to the heart, hence the "inside-out" comment.
Pleasurable Portable Cooling Unit (Score:1)
"Don't worry, dear, just bringing down my core temperature."
Prior Art? What Prior Art? (Score:1)
I've been working on something similar... (Score:1)