56³Ô¹ÏÍø Bothell’s Hung Cao gets NSF Early Career Award to continue developing device that measures zebrafish heart regeneration

hung cao pr

News Release
March 16, 2017
Contact Lisa Hall 425-352-5461 / lhall7@uw.edu
http://www.uwb.edu/news/march-2017/hung-cao-award

56³Ô¹ÏÍø Bothell’s Hung Cao gets NSF Early Career Award to continue developing device that measures zebrafish heart regeneration

BOTHELL, Washington – Hung Cao, 56³Ô¹ÏÍø electrical engineering assistant professor, has been awarded $549,000 from the National Science Foundation Faculty Early Career Development Program (CAREER).

Cao will use the five-year grant to continue developing tiny electronics to monitor the hearts of free-swimming zebrafish, a popular aquarium fish often used in research. Their hearts can regenerate after a 20 percent loss. The research could lead to possible treatments for people who suffer heart attacks.

Heart monitors so minute they can be worn by a fish as small as the tip of your pinky finger can be made in the University’s “clean room” in Discovery Hall. Cao’s zebrafish are located at a University of Washington School of Medicine research facility in the South Lake Union neighborhood of Seattle.

He says no existing technology can do what he plans. “At this point, I would say our lab is the only one in the world trying to do this.”

Cao is the fourth 56³Ô¹ÏÍø Bothell faculty member to receive the prestigious CAREER award, says Carolyn Brennan, assistant vice chancellor for research.

About 56³Ô¹ÏÍø Bothell: 56³Ô¹ÏÍø Bothell provides access to an exceptional University of Washington education to students in a small campus environment that fosters student achievement. Offering more than 55 undergraduate and graduate degrees, options, certificates and concentrations, 56³Ô¹ÏÍø Bothell builds regional partnerships, inspires change, creates knowledge, shares discoveries and prepares students for leadership in the state of Washington and beyond.

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