This is from my Local Newspaper
The University is 2 Towns Away from my location !
Edit = Please tell other ATS Members I Should of Put this in Breaking News Section so it would get noticed! please read source .
Science Fiction Becoming Science Faction Working with in the Biomarkers!
Could This Be part of a Super Soldier Project ? a branch of a MK Ultra Project ?
Just Imagine Nano Technology in the Mix !
Clarkson University is Working For and being Funded by the
Department of Defense & The Navy ( office of Naval Research ) why !
Marines are a Branch of the Navy any way i was day dreaming Universal Solider
Jacobs ladder , Chuck Norris = Silent Rage
The Source
watertowndailytimes.com...
Project may help wounded soldiers
By LORI SHULL
TIMES STAFF WRITER
FRIDAY, JUNE 25, 2010
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POTSDAM — A Clarkson University research project could someday help preserve the lives of wounded soldiers.
Evgeny Katz, a professor in the chemistry and biomolecular science department, is studying biomarkers, chemicals the body releases that indicate
health or illness, to determine what chemicals are released when the body suffers a traumatic injury. The project is being funded by the Department of
Defense and will eventually be used to monitor certain chemicals in the body and administer others to keep injured soldiers alive.
"This soldier was injured in (his) brain and we can recognize it immediately," said Mr. Katz, who is originally from Israel. "The system can
immediately supply some drug to protect the soldier from immediate death and keep him alive until the hospital."
The system will analyze the chemicals, and chemical reactions, found in bodily fluids to determine what kind of injury there is and what kinds of
chemicals need to be administered to keep a person stable until help arrives. It then administers those chemicals automatically.
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A system of electrodes analyzes levels of dozens of chemicals found in the body, like glucose, lactate and norepinephrine, a hormone. It can
determine, based on levels of each of the chemicals, if a body is functioning normally or if it has been injured. It can then specify what kind of
injury has been sustained and what chemicals are necessary to keep a person alive.
And it's all done without a computer or outside inputs, unlike other systems.
"Modern computers do not process chemical information," Mr. Katz said. "It is much simpler than computers, simpler to process. We don't need a
computer, we don't need to watch movies, we don't need to open the Internet.
The system, once developed, can be used in a multitude of ways.
Another professor from the University of California, San Diego, is experimenting with inserting the system in the elastic waistbands of underwear. The
waistbands come into close and constant contact with the skin.
However, the system itself — and the waistbands — are a long way off.
The Office of Naval Research has agreed to provide $2 million over four years for research on the project. The team of scientists are into their
second year of funding, but even after the four years, the biomarker system won't be ready to enter a battlefield. There will still be years of
testing and development to go.
"Even at the end of the four years, it will not be possible to put this device on a soldier and protect him from injuries," Mr. Katz said. "Between
mental research and practical application, there's a very big gap."
Also not easily developed is "smart underwear," as the San Diego project is being called, the only possible application for this kind of technology.
It could also be used to monitor other health problems, like cardiac diseases, according to Mr. Katz. It all depends on who is providing the funding
for research.
"Smart underwear, this is just one side of our project. Smart underwear is just a technical part," he said. "The concept is much bigger and much
more fundamental."
[edit on 26-6-2010 by Wolfenz] Edit Title Change !
[edit on 26-6-2010 by Wolfenz]