Bioengineering Scholarly Journal
Bioengineers have a wide variety of career choices. Some work alongside medical practitioners, developing new medical techniques, medical devices, and instrumentation for manufacturing companies. Hospitals and clinics employ clinical engineers to take care of and improve the technological support systems used for patient care. Engineers with advanced
bioengineering degrees can perform biological and medical research in educational and government research laboratories. Many bioengineers help people by solving complex problems in medicine and
health care. Some
bioengineering jobs combine several disciplines, requiring a various array of skills. Digital hearing aids, implantable defibrillators, artificial heart valves, and pacemakers are all
bioengineering products that help people combat disease and disability. Bioengineers develop advanced therapeutic and surgical devices, like a laser system for eye
surgery and a tool that regulates automated delivery of insulin. In genetics, bioengineers attempt to detect, prevent, and treat genetic diseases. In medicine , bioengineers develop rehabilitation and external support devices. In industry, bioengineers work to know the interaction between living systems and technology. Government bioengineers often add product testing and safety, where they establish safety standards for medical devices and other consumer products. A biomedical engineer employed during a hospital might advise on the choice and use of medical equipment or supervise performance testing and maintenance.
High Impact List of Articles
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Engineered nanomaterials for pharmaceutical and biomedical products new trends, benefits and opportunities
Athanasios Valavanidis & Thomais Vlachogianni
Review Article: Pharmaceutical Bioprocessing
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Engineered nanomaterials for pharmaceutical and biomedical products new trends, benefits and opportunities
Athanasios Valavanidis & Thomais Vlachogianni
Review Article: Pharmaceutical Bioprocessing
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Pushing the limits of high-throughput chromatography process development: current state and future directions
John Welsh
Editorial: Pharmaceutical Bioprocessing
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Pushing the limits of high-throughput chromatography process development: current state and future directions
John Welsh
Editorial: Pharmaceutical Bioprocessing
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Optimizing Chinese hamster ovary cell line development via targeted control of N-glycosylation
Christina S Alves* and Shashi Prajapati
Review Article: Pharmaceutical Bioprocessing
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Optimizing Chinese hamster ovary cell line development via targeted control of N-glycosylation
Christina S Alves* and Shashi Prajapati
Review Article: Pharmaceutical Bioprocessing
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Development of enhanced potency immunotherapy products using nonviral approaches
James Brady, Linhong Li, Angelia Viley, Pachai Natarajan, Cornell Allen, Rama Shivakumar, Meg Duskin and Madhusudan V Peshwa*
Review Article: Pharmaceutical Bioprocessing
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Development of enhanced potency immunotherapy products using nonviral approaches
James Brady, Linhong Li, Angelia Viley, Pachai Natarajan, Cornell Allen, Rama Shivakumar, Meg Duskin and Madhusudan V Peshwa*
Review Article: Pharmaceutical Bioprocessing
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Multimodal chromatography: debottlenecking the downstream processing of monoclonal antibodies
Ines F Pinto, Maria Raquel Aires-Barros & Ana M Azevedo*,
Review Article: Pharmaceutical Bioprocessing
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Multimodal chromatography: debottlenecking the downstream processing of monoclonal antibodies
Ines F Pinto, Maria Raquel Aires-Barros & Ana M Azevedo*,
Review Article: Pharmaceutical Bioprocessing
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Opening the black box: Chinese hamster ovary research goes genome scale
Nicole Borth
Conference Report: Pharmaceutical Bioprocessing
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Opening the black box: Chinese hamster ovary research goes genome scale
Nicole Borth
Conference Report: Pharmaceutical Bioprocessing
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Is microfluidic perfusion culture the future for large-scale screening of human-induced pluripotent stem cells?
Koji Hattori, Shinji Sugiura, Toshiyuki Kanamori and Kiyoshi Ohnuma*
Editorial: Pharmaceutical Bioprocessing
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Is microfluidic perfusion culture the future for large-scale screening of human-induced pluripotent stem cells?
Koji Hattori, Shinji Sugiura, Toshiyuki Kanamori and Kiyoshi Ohnuma*
Editorial: Pharmaceutical Bioprocessing
Relevant Topics in Clinical