DENVER, CO / ACCESSWIRE / August 12, 2021 / ActivArmor is a company that defies the preconception that medicine is a one-size-fits-all field through their innovative fracture immobilization technology ...
When life gives you lemons, you make lemonade. And when life gives you the coronavirus, you make respirator masks. At least, that was the approach ActivArmor chose to take when confronted with a ...
PUEBLO — There's no arguing that the Coronavirus (COVID-19) has changed a massive portion of our daily lives. In the midst of these changes, many local businesses are finding ways to overcome and ...
The days of the plaster and fiberglass casts for immobilizing injured or broken limbs may soon be over, like rotary phones and party lines. With the introduction of 3D-printed, durable plastic casts ...
Broken bones just got a lot easier to mend. That's thanks to 3D printing capabilities that allow doctors at St. Luke's University Health Network to ditch older methods and custom-fit casts for ...
Pueblo startup ActivArmor recently signed another high-profile client for the its novel medical casts and splints: a Florida doctors office that is the official sports medicine provider for the ...
If you’ve ever broken your arm, you know how hard it can be to do things like shower or wash your hands with a cast on. A woman in Pueblo with a background in chemical engineering is trying to solve ...
Regional Orthopedics (RO) is partnering with ActivArmor to provide cutting edge immobilization technology solutions for optimal patient care. ActivArmor custom casting provides patients with a great ...
A growing number of adults will need a cast for a broken bone at least once in their lifetime. Fiberglass casts—the most common type used—hold the bone in place, but they come with a host of ...
The Local newsletter is your free, daily guide to life in Colorado. For locals, by locals. Vail’s 2018-’19 ski season will only be 156 days long—perhaps shorter, if the warming climate gives us ...
In the coronavirus pandemic’s early days, health care workers turned to bandannas and other makeshift protections because they lacked the official stuff. That gave engineers at the University of ...