Biomedical engineering/Related Articles
Jump to navigation
Jump to search
Biomedical engineering: The application of engineering principles to the study and manipulation of biological systems and to the support of health care. [e]
This article contains just a definition and optionally other subpages (such as a list of related articles), but no metadata. Create the metadata page if you want to expand this into a full article.
Parent topics
Subtopics
Bot-suggested topics
Auto-populated based on Special:WhatLinksHere/Biomedical engineering. Needs checking by a human.
- Bioengineering [r]: The application of electrical, mechanical, chemical, optical, nuclear and other engineering principles to understand, modify and control biological (plants and animals - including human) systems. [e]
- Electrical engineering [r]: the branch of engineering that deals with electricity and electromagnetism. [e]
- Engineering [r]: a branch of engineering that uses chemistry, biology, physics, and math to solve problems involving fuel, drugs, food, and many other products. [e]
- Medical education [r]: Learning process of being a medical practitioner, either the initial training to become a doctor or further training thereafter (including residency). [e]
- Neuroimaging [r]: A group of techniques used to visualize structure and function of nervous systems, especially the vertebrate brain. [e]
- Radiology [r]: A physician specialty with a core competence in obtaining and diagnosing by means of instruments that receive energy transmitted through the body; there are a number of subspecialties. [e]
- Thermodynamics [r]: The statistical description of the properties of molecular systems [e]