MENLO PARK, Calif.--(BUSINESS WIRE)--Spirox™, Inc., a company committed to transforming treatment of nasal obstruction, today announced the first US cases with the LATERA™ Absorbable Nasal Implant ...
In 2016, more than 200,000 Americans got a nose job. The procedure, a rhinoplasty, can be performed in many ways - from shaving down the skin to breaking the bones. One of the most common approaches ...
MENLO PARK, Calif.--(BUSINESS WIRE)--In the media contact information, the email address should read: mbrokaw@spiroxmed.com (instead of mbrokaw@spirox.med.com). The corrected release reads: SPIROX ...
Credit: Getty Images. The most important aspects to proper diagnosis of nasal bone fractures are a detailed history and a timely examination. The nasal bones, with their central location on the face, ...
A cartilage nose implant that can grow with the patient thanks to being printed with their cells is now ready for animal trials. Michelle Starr Science editor Michelle Starr is CNET's science editor, ...
Scientists report first ever successful nose reconstruction surgery using cartilage grown in the laboratory. Cartilage cells were extracted from the patient's nasal septum, multiplied and expanded ...
We are all familiar with the stereotype of a broken nose in the movies. The man gets into a fight, suffers a blow to the nose, and is seen walking around with a tape around his nose. However, there is ...
Using cells from the cartilage in patients’ noses, Swiss doctors have successfully made patches to treat 10 adults whose knee cartilage was damaged by injury. Two years after the transplants, most of ...
Even though the recently launched EU project ENCANTO (“magic” in Spanish) has nothing to do with the Disney movie of the same name, the study topic might sound like magic to the layman. "We take a ...
Injured cartilage can take the body a long time to repair, but back in 2014 we looked at a promising study where scientists created grafts from nasal cartilage cells and deployed them in damaged knees ...
Depending on the part of the body and the nature of the injury, cartilage either doesn’t grow back at all, or does so very slowly. That’s why joint injuries often take a long time to heal, to the ...
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