body-on-a-chip

Body-on-a-chip technology could be used to evaluate new drugs and detect possible side effects before the drugs are tested in humans

Human tissue samples linked by microfluidic channels replicate interactions of multiple organs. MIT engineers have

Body-on-a-chip system to accurately predict the effects of drugs, chemicals and biological agents

Using the same expertise they’ve employed to build new organs for patients, scientists at Wake Forest

Body-on-a-chip device is a novel in vitro human model without the use of people or animals for drug discovery

Improvements to tiny body-on-a-chip devices could lead to next-generation pre-clinical testing of drug toxicity Researchers

Tiny 3-D-Printed Organs Aim for “Body on a Chip”

Tiny lab-grown organs connected by an artificial blood system on a two-inch chip could greatly