Scientists at the Imperial College London and DNA Electronics have developed a portable USB device that detects the presence of HIV in a matter of 20 minutes. The aim of such device is to increase ...
While there is still no cure for HIV, it is no longer the death knell it once was thanks to modern medicine. And now, scientists in the UK have developed a new type of portable HIV test that has the ...
A new technology that fits on a USB stick can be used to test for levels of HIV in people's blood, which could aid in treatment of the disease in developing countries, according to a new study. The ...
When is comes to HIV tests, a drop of blood and a USB stick may be all patients need in the near future. Scientists at the Imperial College London developed a device with the help of medical testing ...
It’s now possible to use a USB stick to measure the levels of HIV in a patient’s blood. The device has a 95 percent accuracy rate and takes less than 30 minutes, which is a big improvement over ...
This tool is great if you're cleaning out your junk drawer and don't know if an old USB stick is worth keeping around.
Scientists at Imperial College of London have teamed with UK biotech company DNA Electronics to develop a USB stick-based HIV test capable of sophisticated detection in a fraction of the time of a ...
Some results have been hidden because they may be inaccessible to you
Show inaccessible results