Researchers Create Lung On a Chip 45
ElectricSteve writes "Utilizing human lung and blood vessel cells, researchers have created a device mounted on a microchip that mimics a living, breathing human lung. About the size of a rubber eraser, the device was developed by a team from the Wyss Institute for Biologically Inspired Engineering at Harvard University, Harvard Medical School, and Children's Hospital Boston. Because it's translucent, researchers can watch the processes taking place inside of it — something that's difficult to do with an actual lung. It will be used for testing the respiratory effects of environmental toxins, aerosolized therapeutics, and new drugs. Using conventional models, such tests can cost more than $2 million."
Science Friday (Score:3, Informative)
For anyone interested, this is the topic of Science Friday on NPR -right now-.
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Too late for live listening, the audio will probably be up in the next day or so here:
http://www.sciencefriday.com/program/archives/201006252 [sciencefriday.com]
Sweet, a use that isn't lung replacement (Score:4, Funny)
That aside, when will we be able to implant a RAID array of solid state lungs?
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Would be a RAIL array..
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Oh, go type your PIN number into an ATM machine.
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Isn't it a beowulf cluster, how long have you been here?
If you want to go raid, how would RAID 5 work with these?
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I even talked to a girl.
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The "R" in RAID stands for redundant. I thought most people wanted their RAIDs to be redundant ;-)
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You're probably better off just going with JBOL.
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That aside, when will we be able to implant a RAID array of solid state lungs?
Imagine a beowolf cluster of them...
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And, of course, there are benefits beyond the stated cost savings. We get to see the effects on human lung tissue rather than on approximations like mouse lungs, and it can reduce the number of animals needed for testing.
LungChips (Score:4, Funny)
Now available in Regular, BBQ, and Cool Ranch flavors.
Obligatory: But Will LOAC (Score:1, Funny)
run WinBLOZE [microsoft.com]?
Yours In Krasnoyarsk,
K. Trout
hands off our chips! (Score:3, Funny)
Legions of british couch potatoes were almost moved to protest the inhuman experiments on their national dish.. but couldn't be bovvered.
*phew* lucky I read the summary after..
Hey its friday, gimme a break! ;)
Conventional methods? (Score:3, Funny)
"Using conventional models, such tests can cost over $2 million."
Conventional methods for testing human lungs? Like, for shackles, hiding bodies and bribing the local police?
Progress (Score:3, Funny)
First I can't stick magnets to my hard drive. Now I can't smoke around my CPU. These new-fangled inventions are killing all my fun.
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and if I enjoy recreating life?
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My head just asploded.
recreate [merriam-webster.com]
We weren't meant for recreation, we were meant to have fun! Uh, and I doubt these artificial lungs are self-aware. But the artificial lens in my left eye sees a lot better than the real one it replaced did, even if it's not self-aware. I don't think the real lens was self-aware, either.
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Terminators? (Score:3, Insightful)
What next? (Score:3, Funny)
The sport version (Score:1)
Ill Pass... (Score:2)
...I prefer Queso, Salsa and Jalapenos on my chips
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hey, stop eating mexican over a open computer case!
will work for cheese (Score:1)
For whom the bell tulls (Score:4, Funny)
Sitting on a lab bench
Came of mad science with good intent.
Environmental toxins
Clear tissues seared by nasty goo!
Twitching under cold lights
shivering as endless tests are run.
Looking quite obscene
If it had a mouth it would probably scream.
Microlung!
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Great news for smokers... (Score:1)
Can this thing can just allow nicotine and perform tar garbage collection?
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