Vessel-chip technology may offer more personalized pharmaceutical drug testing, leading to our improved ability to combat disease.

Texas A&M researchers combine food-grade wax with essential oils to defend produce from bacteria.

The electronic skin can flex, stretch and sense like human skin, opening the door for new advances in health and medicine.

Inspired by how fire ants survive floods, Texas A&M scientists have discovered a method that allows synthetic materials to assemble and disassemble in response to changes such as heat or light.

The sensors are designed to alert medical providers about bacterial growth to thwart life-threatening infections.

New funding will help researchers develop an injectable grain-of-rice-sized continuous glucose monitor technology.

The student team created an innovative device to speed the healing process and prevent fluid leakage for newborn babies undergoing dialysis.

A Texas A&M grad student researches symptoms suffered by soldiers deployed to the Gulf War over two decades ago, including her own mother.

Researchers are using photodynamic therapy to break the dangerous cycle of fighting increasingly resistant bacteria with increasingly stronger antibiotics.

A&M's executive dean for EnMed and CEO of EnHealth, Dr. Roderic Pettigrew, is being recognized in the area of Mathematical and Physical Sciences with a specialty in Engineering and Technology.