nanotechnology
Laura, 33, was diagnosed with stage three breast cancer about eight months ago. Based in Valencia, Spain, she says that everything has changed since. “From how I see myself as a person to the way I deal with things, nothing is the same as before," she tells Euronews. "It’s as if I am a completely different person. I’m not me anymore, I am another version of myself". After three operations, a chemo, and a radiotherapy, Laura — a doctor herself — is undergoing a hormone treatment. Pedro, meanwhile, has survived lung cancer. Yet, this 62-year-old Valencian, a former employee of a plastic recyclin...
Euronews (English)
Bioengineers have successfully developed sensors as fine as spider's silk. Researchers at the University of Cambridge in the UK say the extremely light sensors could be used to monitor human health, such as heartbeats, or to detect detailed changes in the environment. The sensors are 50 times thinner than human hair and so lightweight that the scientists were able to print the fibre directly onto a dandelion without it collapsing. In a recently published study, the sensor was tested to pick up signals such as heartbeats in the same way as an electrocardiogram (ECG). The research team says the ...
Euronews (English)
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