Electrical and Biomedical Engineer

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Discussion Overview

The discussion revolves around the potential for individuals with a Bachelor of Science in Electrical Engineering to transition into the field of Biomedical Engineering (BME). Participants explore the job roles, necessary skills, and educational pathways relevant to this interdisciplinary field.

Discussion Character

  • Exploratory
  • Technical explanation
  • Debate/contested

Main Points Raised

  • Some participants suggest that individuals with a background in electrical engineering can work in biomedical engineering, particularly if they pursue graduate studies in BME.
  • One participant notes that biomedical engineering encompasses various specializations, including medical imaging, and emphasizes the importance of signal processing for those interested in this area.
  • Another participant describes the role of biomedical engineers in designing and maintaining medical instruments, highlighting the diversity of tasks within the field.
  • Concerns are raised about the necessity of knowledge in biochemistry and materials science for electrical engineers transitioning to BME, questioning how they can effectively work in the field without this background.
  • Participants discuss the variability in job roles within BME, with some focusing on medical devices while others may work in more technical roles, such as fixing laboratory equipment.
  • There is a mention of the term "biomedical engineer" being used broadly, which may include roles that do not require formal engineering credentials.

Areas of Agreement / Disagreement

Participants express differing views on the qualifications and knowledge necessary for electrical engineers to transition into biomedical engineering. There is no consensus on whether fixing laboratory equipment falls under the purview of biomedical engineering or if it is more aligned with traditional engineering roles.

Contextual Notes

The discussion highlights the lack of clarity around the definitions and roles within biomedical engineering, particularly regarding the overlap with technical and engineering positions. There are also unresolved questions about the educational requirements for transitioning from electrical to biomedical engineering.

Who May Find This Useful

This discussion may be of interest to students or professionals considering a career shift into biomedical engineering, as well as those curious about the interdisciplinary nature of engineering fields.

evra
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I want to know if someone with a BSc in Electrical Engineering can work as a Biomedical Engineer? If yes, how possible? Can you give me the work outline of a Biomedical Engineer please and what particular things should an Electrical Engineer study to be able to work as a Biomedical Engineer?

Thank you in advance. Your inputs will be more than helpful!
 
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PF'ers won't you reply to this one..? desperately looking forward to seeing your inputs.

thanks
 
Biomedical engineering is a fairly broad field. The BMEs that I know personally specialize in MRI, but this is by no means the extent of biomedical engineering. They got their bachelor's degrees in electrical engineering and then moved into BME for graduate work.

I'm sure there are many people who work in BME who came from an electrical background. If you are going through for electrical engineering, make sure that you have a good handle on sigal processing if you're interested in medical imaging.
 
Thank you very much..But what is the actual job of a Biomedical Engineer?
 
from what I read on wikipedia (not an expert by any means don't take my word for it) the electronics part of BME is designing, maintaining, and calibrating biomedical instruments, including medical NMR, X-ray tomography, gamma knife, laser surgery, ultrasound and various optical analytical schemes.

there's also a more "biochemistry and materials science" part of BME that's based on tissue engineering, prosthetics, drug delivery, stuff like that.
 
chill_factor said:
there's also a more "biochemistry and materials science" part of BME that's based on tissue engineering, prosthetics, drug delivery, stuff like that.
An Electrical Engineer might not know what Biochemistry is about, so how can he be a Biomedical Engineer??
 
evra said:
Thank you very much..But what is the actual job of a Biomedical Engineer?

Like I said it's a broad field, so there is a lot of variation between positions. The BMEs I know have become medical physicists specializing in MRI. So they work on projects like MR spectroscopy (determining the relative concentrations of various molecules within patients, experimental animals, or samples), designing pulse sequences that give different information about the objects being scanned, or generally improving the quality of the images that are produced. There is also a safety component to their position as well that involves limiting risks to patients from RF heating or to staff from working around strong magnetic fields.

But that's just one small aspect of the field. BMEs for example, could work for a commecial company that produces any number of medical devices - anything from pacemakers to artificial heart valves, to ultrasound transducers. There is obviously a lot over overlap with other fields of engineering.

evra said:
An Electrical Engineer might not know what Biochemistry is about, so how can he be a Biomedical Engineer??

You learn what you need to know. Graduate BME students may take some courses outside of tradiational engineering in order to work on their particular projects. Usually, BME projects are more about creating devices or algorithms that have particular biomedical applications. It's not necessary to know the "squishy science" side of things to the extend that MDs or biochemists might.
 
Thank you sir..
 
One other thing! in my country we have a very large medical research center but they have few Biomedical Engineers and there job is to fix spoil machines, spoiled centrifuges, pipettes etc.. so i was thinking maybe that the job of an electrical or mechanical engineer and not a biomedical star. any help??
 
  • #10
chill and choppy, i am waiting for your wonderful inputs again!
 
  • #11
I'm not sure exactly what your question is.

Remember that the term "biomedical engineer" can be applied rather liberally. In some places it may be used to refer to a biomedical technician, who is not necessarily a credentialled professional engineer.
 
  • #12
ok.. i wanted to ask if fixing spoiled machines, spoiled centrifuges, pipettes etc is also part of biomedical engineering?
 
  • #13
Choppy, i am still waiting for your reply.. can you kindly give me your email address so that i will be contacting you directly..

regards
 

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