Health
Minimally invasive technique can help extract dermal interstitial fluid for diagnostic applications – News-Medical.Net
Using an array of tiny needles that are almost too small to see, researchers have developed a minimally invasive technique for sampling a largely unexplored human…

Reviewed by Emily Henderson, B.Sc.Nov 25 2020
Using an array of tiny needles that are almost too small to see, researchers have developed a minimally invasive technique for sampling a largely unexplored human bodily fluid that could potentially provide a new source of information for routine clinical monitoring and diagnostic testing.
Biochemical information about the body most commonly comes from analysis of blood -; which represents only 6% of bodily fluids -; but valuable information may also…
-
Noosa News24 hours ago
Two-time Archibald Prize-winning painter William Robinson has died, aged 89
-
Noosa News23 hours ago
William Robinson dies aged 89
-
General23 hours ago
Calls for corruption probe into completion of mayor’s Surfers Paradise Bowls Club site purchase
-
General23 hours ago
Matt Wright wanted to hinder investigations into chopper crash ‘at almost any cost’, jury hears