Fritextsökning
Artiklar per år
Innehållstyper
-
Medtech companies find new beam technique
The medtech companies Raysearch and Nucletron expand collaboration with two new solutions for radiation treatment planning.
-
Abbott expands by acquisition
An acquisition gives Abbott a leadership position in another large and growing medical device segment.
-
Dupont gets new business manager
The Swedish API manufacturer Dupont Chemoswed has appointed a new business development manager.
-
Transatlantic cooperation for healthier food
Danish and American scientists are going to work together to find ways to fight malnutrition and life style disease like obesity in the western world.
-
Transatlantic cooperation for healthier food
Danish and American scientists are going to work together to find ways to fight malnutrition and life style disease like obesity in the western world.
-
New map of eye proteins
A new mapping of proteins in the eye opens the door for new treatments of eye diseases in the future.
-
Vitrolife wants to acquire Medicult
The Swedish company Vitrolife intends to make en exchange offer to the shareholders of the Danish company Medicult to acquire all outstanding shares in the company.
-
Norwegian cancer therapy leaves phase II
New clinical results from Algeta highlights the potential of Alpharadin to treat bone metastases in major cancer indications.
-
Norwegian describes scrapie gene
Intestinal lymphatic tissue is important for the absorption and spread of the scrapie prion, suggests a Norwegian researcher.
-
New nano professor in Denmark
The Technical University of Denmark has appointed a recognized physicist as a new professor of miniaturized sensors.
-
New head of Vinnova
While waiting for a new gerenal-director, Vinnova has got a substitute general-director.
-
A platform for dialogue
As a step towards connecting the life science industry in Denmark, Biologue was founded three years ago with 10 member companies. Today, the network has 40 members and a very busy event calender.
-
Martin Bergö: "The Idea is the Thing"
Martin Bergö, 38, goes wherever ideas take him - it's a process that has led to, and resulted from, plenty of unexpected results. Those ideas have been recognized as good ones: in 2008, he was awarded the Eric K. Fernström Foundation's Prize for young researchers. It isn't the first award for the Associate Professor at Gothenburg University's Sahlgrenska Academy. In 2007, he received a grant award of 16 million SEK from the European Research Council for his pioneering work.