Heart Pump
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ISRO's Rocket Scientists Build Pump For Heart Transplants
- Tuesday April 19, 2016
- India News | Written by Pallava Bagla
Scientists at the Indian Space Research Organisation or ISRO have used material and technology used to build rockets to create a small device that pumps blood and is seen as a step towards making an artificial heart.
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www.ndtv.com
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NASA Develops Pump To Work For Kids With Heart Diseases
- Thursday March 10, 2016
- Health | Indo-Asian News Service
A heart pump using flywheel technology, developed by engineers at NASA's Glenn Research Centre, has raised hope of a better life for children born with only one heart ventricle, or essentially half a heart.
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www.ndtv.com/health
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Heart pump ticks down, batteries left at home
- Tuesday August 10, 2010
- World News | Denise Grady, New York Times
Christian Volpe was shopping with his wife when an alarm started beeping to warn that only 15 minutes of battery power were left on the implanted heart pump that was keeping him alive.Mr. Volpe, 67, a slight, gray-haired man, looked in his car for the bag he always keeps nearby with spare batteries. But, no bag. In his mind's eye he saw exactly whe...
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www.ndtv.com
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ISRO's Rocket Scientists Build Pump For Heart Transplants
- Tuesday April 19, 2016
- India News | Written by Pallava Bagla
Scientists at the Indian Space Research Organisation or ISRO have used material and technology used to build rockets to create a small device that pumps blood and is seen as a step towards making an artificial heart.
-
www.ndtv.com
-
NASA Develops Pump To Work For Kids With Heart Diseases
- Thursday March 10, 2016
- Health | Indo-Asian News Service
A heart pump using flywheel technology, developed by engineers at NASA's Glenn Research Centre, has raised hope of a better life for children born with only one heart ventricle, or essentially half a heart.
-
www.ndtv.com/health
-
Heart pump ticks down, batteries left at home
- Tuesday August 10, 2010
- World News | Denise Grady, New York Times
Christian Volpe was shopping with his wife when an alarm started beeping to warn that only 15 minutes of battery power were left on the implanted heart pump that was keeping him alive.Mr. Volpe, 67, a slight, gray-haired man, looked in his car for the bag he always keeps nearby with spare batteries. But, no bag. In his mind's eye he saw exactly whe...
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www.ndtv.com