Chia-Hsien Hsu

Chia-Hsien Hsu

Institute of Biomedical Engineering and Nanomedicine, National Health Research Institutes, Taiwan

Affiliated withNational Health Research Institutes, TaiwanNational Chung Hsing UniversityNational Tsing Hua University

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Research Area

Biography

Chia-Hsien Hsu is an Associate Investigator at the Institute of Biomedical Engineering and Nanomedicine at National Health Research Institutes (NHRI) in Taiwan. He also holds adjunct faculty positions in the Institute of NanoEngineering and Microsystems of National Tsing Hua University, and in the Ph.D. Program in Tissue Engineering and Regenerative Medicine of National Chung Hsing University. His current research interest focuses on the development of Microfluidics technologies for cell manipulation and culture for applications in cancer, stem cell and regenerative medicine. The long-term research goal of his laboratory is develop enabling microfluidics tools for biomedical research, and medical uses.

JoVE Journal Publications

ArticleTotal : 2
Year
A Microfluidic Platform for High-throughput Single-cell Isolation and Culture
Publication title

Cited by 7

2016
2019

Other Publications

Article
Year
"Microcanals" for micropipette access to single cells in microfluidic environments.

Lab on a chip| PubMed ID: 15472724

2004
2005
2008
2010
Isolation of circulating tumor cells using a microvortex-generating herringbone-chip.

Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America| PubMed ID: 20930119

2010
2011
2013
2013
2014
2015
2015
2015
Towards an Endpoint Cell Motility Assay by a Microfluidic Platform.

IEEE transactions on nanobioscience| PubMed ID: 26415207

2015
Fertilization of Mouse Gametes in Vitro Using a Digital Microfluidic System.

IEEE transactions on nanobioscience| PubMed ID: 26529769

2015
2016
Enzyme-Free Dissociation of Neurospheres by a Microfluidic Chip-Based Method.

Methods in molecular biology (Clifton, N.J.)| PubMed ID: 27044047

2016
A PDMS-Based Microfluidic Hanging Drop Chip for Embryoid Body Formation.

Molecules (Basel, Switzerland)| PubMed ID: 27399655

2016
2016
2016
Erratum to: Enzyme-Free Dissociation of Neurospheres by a Microfluidic Chip-Based Method.

Methods in molecular biology (Clifton, N.J.)| PubMed ID: 28795392

2016
2019
2019
2019