Monday, August 5, 2019

Blinking eye-on-a-chip used for disease modeling and drug testing

People who spend eight or more hours a day staring at a computer screen may notice their eyes becoming tired or dry, and, if those conditions are severe enough, they may eventually develop dry eye disease (DED). DED is a common disease with shockingly few FDA-approved drug options, partially because of the difficulties of modeling the complex pathophysiology in human eyes. Enter the blinking eye-on-a-chip: an artificial human eye replica constructed in the laboratory of Penn Engineering researchers.

From http://besthealthnews.com/2019/08/blinking-eye-on-a-chip-used-for-disease-modeling-and-drug-testing/?utm_source=rss&utm_medium=rss&utm_campaign=blinking-eye-on-a-chip-used-for-disease-modeling-and-drug-testing

from
https://healthnews010.wordpress.com/2019/08/06/blinking-eye-on-a-chip-used-for-disease-modeling-and-drug-testing/

From https://jamesjohnson10.blogspot.com/2019/08/blinking-eye-on-chip-used-for-disease.html



from
https://jamesjohnson10.wordpress.com/2019/08/06/blinking-eye-on-a-chip-used-for-disease-modeling-and-drug-testing/

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