Q3: What is the BME program that you direct?
The BME program is really a continuum of laboratories and studies that allow us to study everything from basic anatomy through complex movement. We have a surgical skills and anatomy lab where we can do elaborate dissections and reconstructions of functional tissues. We have multiple systems for mechanical testing of joints and structures. We have a mechanical testing machine that can pull and twist bones and tendons. And then we have a robot that can recreate very complex motions of any joint in the body. We can look and see how tendons and ligaments are functioning during these particular motions.
- Scott Tashman, Ph.D.
- Scott Tashman, Ph.D., Director, BioMedical Engineering
- Q1: What is the Biomotion Lab and when did it become a part of SPRI and The Steadman Clinic?
- Q2: What will we find in the Biomotion Lab?
- Q3: What is the BME program that you direct?
- Q4: Dr. Huard loves to use the word “collaboration” when talking about the team at SPRI and its colleagues around the globe. Do you see that being a big factor in your work in Vail and Houston?
- Q5: What is the most satisfying part of the work you perform with SPRI and The Steadman Clinic?