1 min

Smart Bandage Detects Invisible Wounds Dermatology (Video)

    • Science

"We set out to create a type of bandage that could detect bedsores as they are forming, before the damage reaches the surface of the skin," said Michel Maharbiz, UC Berkeley associate professor of electrical engineering and computer sciences and head of the smart bandage project. Thanks to advances in flexible electronics, Berkeley engineers, in collaboration with colleagues at UC San Francisco, have created a new "smart bandage" that uses electrical currents to detect early tissue damage from pressure ulcers, or bedsores, before they can be seen by human eyes and while recovery is still possible. Series: "UC Berkeley News" [Health and Medicine] [Show ID: 30060]

"We set out to create a type of bandage that could detect bedsores as they are forming, before the damage reaches the surface of the skin," said Michel Maharbiz, UC Berkeley associate professor of electrical engineering and computer sciences and head of the smart bandage project. Thanks to advances in flexible electronics, Berkeley engineers, in collaboration with colleagues at UC San Francisco, have created a new "smart bandage" that uses electrical currents to detect early tissue damage from pressure ulcers, or bedsores, before they can be seen by human eyes and while recovery is still possible. Series: "UC Berkeley News" [Health and Medicine] [Show ID: 30060]

1 min

Top Podcasts In Science

Ologies with Alie Ward
Alie Ward
Crash Course Pods: The Universe
Crash Course Pods, Complexly
Hidden Brain
Hidden Brain, Shankar Vedantam
Sidenote by AsapSCIENCE
AsapSCIENCE
Quirks and Quarks
CBC
Radiolab
WNYC Studios

More by UCTV

Autism (Audio)
UCTV
Dalai Lama (Video)
UCTV
Microbiome (Audio)
UCTV
Orthopedics (Audio)
UCTV
Holocaust (Audio)
UCTV
Evolution (Audio)
UCTV