Yale / Biology

What Is Biomedical Engineering?

By Mark Saltzman | Introduction to Biomedical Engineering Lecture 1 of 25

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Lecture Description

Professor Saltzman introduces the concepts and applications of biomedical engineering, providing an overview of the course syllabus, reading materials for lecture and labs and grading logistics. Various pictures are shown to highlight the current application of biomedical engineering technologies in daily life (eg. chest x-ray, PET scan, operating room, gene chip, transport). Next, living standards and medical technologies of the past and present are compared to point out the impact of biomedical engineering as well as areas for improvement in the field. Finally, Professor Saltzman draws references from the poem "London Bridge" to illustrate some societal issues in making materials and devices in biomedical engineering.

Course Description

The course covers basic concepts of biomedical engineering and their connection with the spectrum of human activity. It serves as an introduction to the fundamental science and engineering on which biomedical engineering is based. Case studies of drugs and medical products illustrate the product development-product testing cycle, patent protection, and FDA approval. It is designed for science and non-science majors.

Related Resources

Lecture Transcript, Handouts, Practice Problems, and Readings

Course Index

  1. What Is Biomedical Engineering?
  2. What Is Biomedical Engineering? (cont)
  3. Genetic Engineering
  4. Genetic Engineering (cont)
  5. Cell Culture Engineering
  6. Cell Culture Engineering (cont)
  7. Cell Communication and Immunology
  8. Cell Communication and Immunology (cont)
  9. Biomolecular Engineering: Engineering of Immunity
  10. Biomolecular Engineering: Engineering of Immunity (cont)
  11. Biomolecular Engineering: General Concepts
  12. Biomolecular Engineering: General Concepts (cont)
  13. Cardiovascular Physiology
  14. Cardiovascular Physiology (cont)
  15. Cardiovascular Physiology (cont)
  16. Renal Physiology
  17. Renal Physiology (cont)
  18. Biomechanics and Orthopedics
  19. Biomechanics and Orthopedics (cont)
  20. Bioimaging
  21. Bioimaging (cont)
  22. Tissue Engineering
  23. Tissue Engineering (cont)
  24. Biomedical Engineers and Cancer
  25. Biomedical Engineers and Artificial Organs
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