Space Technology Hall of Fame Inducts NASA Spinoff Technologies

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April 10, 2008

David E. Steitz
Headquarters, Washington
202-358-1730

RELEASE: 08-099

SPACE TECHNOLOGY HALL OF FAME INDUCTS NASA SPINOFF TECHNOLOGIES

COLORADO SPRINGS, Colo. -- During a ceremony at the National Space 
Symposium in Colorado Springs Thursday, the Space Foundation will 
induct three NASA-developed technologies into the Space Technology 
Hall of Fame. A medical diagnostic software tool that measures the 
thickness of arteries, a non-invasive medical device that improves 
blood flow to the heart and brain, and a technology that safely 
removes petroleum-based pollutants from water or soil each are being 
recognized as important products that originated from space 
technology. 

The medical diagnostic software tool initially was developed by NASA's 
Jet Propulsion Laboratory in Pasadena, Calif. ArterioVision software 
is a diagnostic tool used in conjunction with a standard ultrasound 
to precisely measure the thickness of the two inner layers of the 
carotid artery. Arterial thickening can provide the earliest evidence 
of atherosclerosis, or hardening of the arteries. ArterioVision 
technology is derived from video imaging communication and retrieval 
software used to process pictures from spacecraft imagery. 

ArterioVision allows doctors to measure the age and health of a 
patient's arteries and better predict and prevent the risk of heart 
disease and stroke. Medical Technologies International, Inc. of Palm 
Desert, Calif., the company that patented the software, will be 
inducted for ArterioVision along with JPL and the University of 
Southern California's Keck School of Medicine in Los Angeles.

The second technology inductee, ResQPOD, is a non-invasive medical 
device that helps improve cardiac output and blood flow to the brain 
during CPR compared to conventional resuscitation techniques. ResQPOD 
is used by emergency medical services and hospitals for patients 
suffering breathing problems, cardiac arrest or other conditions 
attributed to low blood pressure. It works by increasing blood flow 
to the heart and brain until the heart can be restarted. 

Developed by NASA's Kennedy Space Center in Florida, the Army and 
private industry, the device is used to help astronauts reacquaint 
themselves with the feeling of gravity by quickly and effectively 
increasing the circulation of blood flow to the brain. Advanced 
Circulatory Systems, Minneapolis, Minn., and the KSC Biomedical Lab, 
Cape Canaveral, Fla., will be inducted as the innovating 
organizations behind the ResQPOD technology.

A third technology inductee, the Petroleum Remediation Product (PRP), 
safely and permanently removes petroleum-based pollutants from water 
or soil. The delivery system of this water treatment process grew out 
of NASA biological encapsulation research and experimentation in the 
orbital production of microspheres. 

The PRP uses microcapsules, tiny balls of beeswax with hollow centers, 
which absorb and bind with petroleum or other hydrocarbon products. 
The microspheres serve as nutrients to assist naturally occurring 
microbes in soil or water to biodegrade contaminants. 

NASA's JPL proved the feasibility of encapsulating live cells, while 
technology developed at NASA's Marshall Space Flight Center in 
Huntsville, Ala., for experiments in orbital production of 
microspheres gave the basic design of the delivery system. Industry 
scientists worked with researchers at NASA to develop the technology. 
Universal Remediation, Inc. of Pittsburgh has developed a number of 
customized products using this technology to treat environmental 
contamination.

The technologies being recognized by the Space Technology Hall of Fame 
are possible, in part, because of NASA's Innovative Partnership 
Program. The program, managed at NASA Headquarters in Washington, 
works to transfer NASA technology for broad public benefit. It also 
provides needed technology and capabilities for NASA's mission 
directorates, programs and projects through leveraged investments and 
partnerships with industry, academia, government agencies and 
national laboratories. 

There are Innovative Partnership Program offices at all NASA centers 
that facilitate new and innovative partnerships, provide technology 
solutions for NASA missions, and help NASA accelerate technology 
maturation.

For more about NASA's Innovative Partnership Program, visit:

http://www.ipp.nasa.gov

For a complete list of all Space Technology Hall of Fame inducted 
technologies, organizations, and individuals, visit:

http://www.SpaceTechHallofFame.org

	
-end-



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