News & Events
Displaying 49 - 57 of 57
Displaying 49 - 57 of 57
Julius Guccione "Mesmerized" by Virtual 3D Image of Beating Heart
Cardiac Biomechanics Lab
January 16, 2014
Dr. Julius Guccione, a biomedical engineer and co-director of the UCSF Cardiac Biomechanics Lab, lauded the development of technology rendering a virtual image of a beating heart by Dassault Systèmes, a French design and simulation software company. Dassault has developed a complete, three-dimensional view of the...
Medical Devices Fall Short for Children
UCSF Pediatric Surgery
May 06, 2013
"Innovation in medicine is driven by need, but also by the market," said Dr. Michael R. Harrison, the director emeritus of the Fetal Treatment Center and the director of the Pediatric Device Consortium, both at the University of California, San Francisco. "Big markets have lots of folks developing devices, but...
Heart Failure Patient Loses 100 Pounds Before Transplant Surgery
UCSF Adult Cardiothoracic Surgery
February 01, 2013
UCSF News reports on the use of a Ventricular Assist Device (VAD) as a bridge to a heart transplant allowing a patient to lose the weight needed to undergo the procedure: Suitulaga "Sugi" Hunkin has been overweight most of his life. He attributes that to his love of food and his Samoan ancestry. Because of his...
Magnet trial an attractive option for kids with sunken chest
UCSF Pediatric Surgery
August 19, 2012
Surgeons at the UCSF Benioff Children's Hospital in San Francisco are using magnets to reshape the breastbones of children who suffer from Sunken Chest Syndrome. The technique is undergoing phase 3 clinical trials, but the doctors hope to prove that long term magnetic force is as effective and less painful than...
Magnets May Pull Kids With Sunken Chests Out Of Operating Room
UCSF Pediatric Surgery
July 30, 2012
A new method for repairing Pectus Exacavatum using magnets and an external brace, developed by Michael Harrison , a pediatric surgeon at the University of California, San Francisco's Benioff Children's Hospital , could provide an alternative to the surgery.
Kids With Chest Wall Deformities Get Comprehensive Care at Clinic
UCSF Pediatric Surgery
July 09, 2012
Justin is being treated at the UCSF Comprehensive Center for Chest Wall Deformities, a new interdisciplinary pediatric clinic at UCSF Benioff Children's Hospital that offers a wide range of interventions for children with all types of chest wall deformities, from common to complex. Justin has the most common chest...
Surgeons Seek Kid-Sized Tools for the Operating Room
UCSF Pediatric Surgery
January 27, 2012
UCSF has received about a million dollars since 2009. That money has supported the development of tools to treat scoliosis, kidney failure and sunken chest, among other conditions. The pectus, or sunken chest device, is in clinical trials.
UCSF Consortium Collaborates to Invent Medical Devices for Children
UCSF Pediatric Surgery
November 01, 2011
The UCSF "D'Vice Squad," a group of innovators from across the Bay Area, has drawn from diverse disciplines over the last two years to develop medical devices for children. Now the squad's hard work has been rewarded with a $1 million grant from the U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA) to expand its work over...
Tim Chuter Presented SVS Medal for Innovation in Vascular Surgery
UCSF Vascular & Endovascular Surgery
July 15, 2008
Dr. Timothy A.M. Chuter was presented the Society for Vascular Surgery Medal for Innovation in Vascular Surgery at the 62nd Annual Meeting of the Society for Vascular Surgery on June 6, 2008. Dr. Chuter has been a leading developer of the technology utilized in endovascular treatment of vascular disease for over...