
Canran Wang
@wcanran
PhD student @Caltech Gao Lab; focusing on wearable bioelectronics
ID: 1044096680767873024
24-09-2018 05:30:21
17 Tweet
208 Followers
367 Following





Check our recent review paper titled āMuti-dimensional printing for bone tissue engineeringā ā Advanced Healthcare Materials ā¦@AdvSciNewsā© Many thanks to the team! ā¦Ali Khademhosseiniā© ā¦Terasaki Institute for Biomedical Innovationā© onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1002/adā¦


Our new preview article in ā¦ā¦Matter_CPā© highlighting a soft bioaffinity sensor array for chronic wound monitoring from ā¦CT Limā© ā¦NUSā©! ā¦Canran Wangā© ā¦Ehsan Shirzaei Saniā© cell.com/matter/fulltexā¦


Our latest paper on Wearable Bioelectronics for Chronic Wound Management - Advanced Functional Materials ā¦@AdvSciNewsā© - Cheers to ā¦Canran Wangā© ā¦Ehsan Shirzaei Saniā© ! onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1002/adā¦

In this work Nature Biomedical Engineering, we report a highly adaptable wearable sensing strategy that enables us to monitor a number of biomarkers (e.g., nutrients) ā¦ā¦ā¦ā¦Caltechā© ā¦Caltech Division of Engineering & Applied Scienceā© Cheers toā© MINQIANG WANG Yiran Yang ā¦Jihong Minā©! nature.com/articles/s4155ā¦


New in ā¦ā¦ā¦Nature Biomedical Engineeringā©, we report a wearable biosensor for wireless monitoring of systemic inflammation. We identified elevated sweat CRP in patients with heart failure, COPD, and infection. Cheers to ā¦ā¦JiaobingTuā©! ā¦ā¦ā¦Caltechā© nature.com/articles/s4155ā¦

New in ā¦NatRevMaterialsā©, we discuss the progress and prospects of translational wound management materials and technologies. Contrasts to ā¦Canran Wangā© ā¦Ehsan Shirzaei Saniā© ā¦Caltechā© ā¦Caltech Division of Engineering & Applied Scienceā©! nature.com/articles/s4157ā¦

New in Science Translational Medicine, we present iCARESāa microfluidic smart bandage designed for real-time wound exudate management and analysis in human chronic wounds. Congrats to Canran Wang, Kexin, David G. Armstrong follow @dgarmstrong.bsky.social , and the team!! Caltech USC science.org/doi/10.1126/scā¦

A āsmartā wearable microfluidic device can continuously monitor chronic wounds in mice and humans by collecting and analyzing wound exudate, and could facilitate real-time wound management and more personalized treatments. Wei Gao Caltech Division of Engineering & Applied Science scim.ag/4cRDfbw
