Biomedical Engineering
Steven W. Graves, Director
Center for Biomedical Engineering
Centennial Engineering Center 2041
MSC01 1141
1 University of New Mexico
Albuquerque, NM 87131-0001
(505) 277-2043
Affiliated Faculty
Kateryna Artyushkova, Chemical and Nuclear Engineering
Plamen Atanassov, Chemical and Nuclear Engineering
C. Jeffrey Brinker, Chemical and Nuclear Engineering
Vince Calhoun, Electrical and Computer Engineering
Heather Canavan, Chemical and Nuclear Engineering
Thomas Caudell, Electrical and Computer Engineering
Eva Chi, Chemical and Nuclear Engineering
Elizabeth L. Dirk, Chemical and Nuclear Engineering
Jeremy Edwards, Molecular Genetics and Microbiology, and Chemical & Nuclear Engineering
James P. Freyer, Chemical and Nuclear Engineering
Julia Fulghum, Chemical and Nuclear Engineering
Steven W. Graves, Chemical and Nuclear Engineering
Sang Han, Chemical and Nuclear Engineering
Steven J. Koch, Physics and Astronomy
Ravi Jain, Electrical Engineering
Terran Lane, Computer Science
Zayd C. Leseman, Mechanical Engineering, and Electrical and Computer Engineering
Gabriel P. Lopez, Chemical and Nuclear Engineering
Meeko Oishi, Electrical and Computer Engineering
Marek Osinski, Electrical and Computer Engineering
Marios Pattichis, Electrical and Computer Engineering
Dimiter Petsev, Chemical and Nuclear Engineering
Andrew Shreve, Chemical and Nuclear Engineering
Scott S. Sibbett, Chemical and Nuclear Engineering
Darko Stefanovic, Computer Science
Mahmoud Reda Taha, Civil Engineering
Timothy L. Ward, Chemical and Nuclear Engineering
Margaret Werner-Washburne, Biology
David Whitten, Chemical and Nuclear Engineering
John E. Wood, Mechanical Engineering
Steve A. Young, Pathology
Courses
BME 517. Applied Biology for Biomedical Engineers. (3)
Emphasis on engineering principles and analysis of: (i) the cell as a complete system, including cellular subsystems, structures and functions; and (ii) select higher order systems of human physiology.
Restriction: permission of instructor or BME graduate advisor.
{Fall}
BME 544. Thermodynamics of Biological Systems. (3)
Principles of chemical thermodynamics will be considered and applied to the understanding of biological systems and to the development of biotechnological applications.
Restriction: permission of instructor or BME graduate advisor.
{Spring}
BME 547. Biomedical Engineering Research Practices. (3)
Students will develop research, presentation, and scientific writing skills for theses, proposals, invention disclosures and journal articles. The course includes oral presentations, case studies of research ethics, technology transfer and manuscript preparation.
Restriction: permission of instructor.
{Fall}
BME 556. Protein and Nucleic Acid Engineering. (3)
Students will learn the scientific principles and methods for engineering and manufacturing custom proteins, peptides, nucleic acids, and carbohydrates. The course will explicitly discuss methods and tools used in the production of engineered biomacromolecules.
Restriction: permission of instructor.
{Fall}
BME 558. Methods of Analysis in Bioengineering. (3)
Presents applied analytical and numerical mathematical methods in the context of biomedical engineering problems. Introduces statistical methods for the design of experiments and analysis of experimental data in research and development activities.
Restriction: permission of instructor.
{Spring}
BME 567. Biomedical Engineering Seminar. (1 to a maximum of 8)
Students will gain insight into scientific presentations and current biomedical engineering research by presenting their research and actively participating in an external research seminar, which will feature outstanding external and internal researchers as speakers.
Restriction: permission of instructor.
{Fall, Spring}
BME 570. Physical Bioanalytical Methods. (3)
Introduction to the physics and chemistry of classical physical methods of analyzing biological and biologically-related samples. Topics include fluorescence microscopy, chemiluminescence, chromatography, electrophoresis, mass spectrometry, electrochemistry, ultracentrifugation, SPR, SEM, TEM, AFM, XPS, radiochemistry and flow cytometry.
Restriction: permission of instructor.
{Fall, even years}
BME 572. Biomaterials Engineering. (3)
Introduction to biomaterials currently in use, including commercial and research applications. Includes an understanding of a material's properties, biological responses to the materials, clinical context of their use, manufacturing processes, and regulatory issues.
Restriction: permission of instructor or BME graduate advisor.
{Fall, odd years}
BME 579. Tissue Engineering. (3)
A review of the current strategies involved in the design of engineered tissues and organs. The principles underlying the implementation of selected cells, biomaterial scaffolds, soluble regulators, and culture conditions will be addressed.
Restriction: permission of instructor.
{Spring, even years}
BME 598. Special Topics. (1-3, no limit Δ)
{Offered upon demand}
BME 599. Master's Thesis. (1-6, no limit Δ)
See Graduate Programs section for total credit requirements.
BME 699. Dissertation. (3-12, no limit Δ)
See Graduate Programs section for total credit requirements.