What are Biomedical engineering ?
Biomedical engineering is the application of engineering  principles and techniques to the medical field. This field seeks to  close the gap between engineering and medicine. It combines the design  and problem solving skills of engineering  with medical and biological sciences to improve healthcare diagnosis  and treatment.
 
Biomedical engineering has only recently emerged as its own  discipline, compared to many other engineering fields; such an evolution  is common as a new field transitions from being an interdisciplinary  specialization among already-established fields, to being considered a  field in itself. Much of the work in biomedical engineering consists of research and development, spanning a  broad array of subfields (see below). Prominent biomedical engineering  applications include the development of biocompatible prostheses,  various diagnostic and therapeutic medical devices ranging from clinical equipment to  micro-implants, common imaging equipment such as MRIs  and EEGs, biotechnologies such as regenerative  tissue growth, and pharmaceutical drugs and biopharmaceuticals.
A JARVIK-7 artificial heart, an example of a  biomedical engineering application of mechanical engineering with biocompatible materials for cardiothoracic surgery using an artificial organ.
Subdisciplines within  biomedical engineering 
Biomedical engineering is a highly interdisciplinary field,  influenced by (and overlapping with) various other engineering and  medical fields. This often happens with newer disciplines, as they  gradually emerge in their own right after evolving from special  applications of extant disciplines. Due to this diversity, it is typical  for a biomedical engineer to focus on a particular subfield or group of  related subfields. There are many different taxonomic breakdowns within  BME, as well as varying views about how best to organize them and  manage any internal overlap; the main U.S. organization devoted to BME  divides the major specialty areas as follows:
- Biomechatronics
- Bioinstrumentation
- Biomaterials
- Biomechanics
- Bionics
- Cellular, Tissue, and Genetic Engineering
- Clinical Engineering
- Medical Imaging
- Orthopaedic Bioengineering
- Rehabilitation engineering
- Systems Physiology
- Bionanotechnology
Sometimes, disciplines within BME are classified by their  association(s) with other, more established engineering fields, which  can include:
- Chemical engineering - often associated  with biochemical, cellular, molecular and tissue engineering, biomaterials, and biotransport.
- Electrical engineering - often  associated with bioelectrical and neural engineering, bioinstrumentation, biomedical  imaging, and medical devices. This  also tends to encompass Optics and Optical engineering - biomedical optics, imaging and  related medical devices.
- Mechanical engineering - often  associated with biomechanics, biotransport, medical devices, and modeling of biological systems.
Biotechnology  and Pharmaceuticals  
Biotechnology (see also relatedly bioengineering) can be a  somewhat ambiguous term, sometimes loosely used interchangeably with BME  in general; however, it more typically denotes specific products which  use "biological systems, living organisms, or derivatives thereof."  Even some complex "medical devices"  (see below) can reasonably be deemed "biotechnology" depending on the  degree to which such elements are central to their principle of  operation. Biologics/Biopharmaceuticals (e.g., vaccines, stored blood  product), genetic engineering, and various agricultural applications are  some major classes of biotechnology.
Pharmaceuticals are related to biotechnology in two indirect ways: 1)  certain major types (e.g. biologics) fall under both categories, and 2)  together they essentially comprise the "non-medical-device" set  of BME applications. (The "Device - Bio/Chemical" spectrum is an  imperfect dichotomy, but one regulators often use, at least as a  starting point.)
Tissue engineering
Tissue Engineering is a major segment of Biotechnology.
One of the goals of tissue engineering is to create artificial organs  (via biological material) for patients that need organ transplants.  Biomedical engineers are currently researching methods of creating such  organs. Researchers have grown solid jawbones  and tracheas  from human stem cells towards this end. Several bladders actually have been grown in  laboratories and transplanted successfully into patients.  Bioartificial organs, which use both synthetic and biological  components, are also a focus area in research, such as with hepatic  assist devices that use liver cells within an artificial bioreactor  construct.
Genetic  engineering 
Genetic engineering, recombinant DNA technology, genetic  modification/manipulation (GM) and gene splicing are terms that apply to  the direct manipulation of an organism's genes.[1] Genetic engineering  is different from traditional breeding, where the organism's genes are  manipulated indirectly. Genetic engineering uses the techniques of  molecular cloning and transformation to alter the structure and  characteristics of genes directly. Genetic engineering techniques have  found success in numerous applications. Some examples are in improving  crop technology (not a medical application per se; see BioSystems  Engineering), the manufacture of synthetic human insulin through  the use of modified bacteria, the manufacture of erythropoietin in  hamster ovary cells, and the production of new types of experimental  mice such as the oncomouse (cancer mouse) for research.
 Pharmaceutical  engineering 
Pharmaceutical Engineering is sometimes regarded as a branch of  biomedical engineering, and sometimes a branch of chemical engineering; in practice, it is very much a  hybrid sub-discipline (as many BME fields are). Aside from those  pharmaceutical products directly incorporating biological agents or  materials, even developing chemical drugs is considered to require  substantial BME knowledge due to the physiological interactions inherent  to such products' usage.
Medical devices
This is an extremely broad category -- essentially covering  all health care products that do not achieve their intended  results through predominantly chemical (e.g., pharmaceuticals) or  biological (e.g., vaccines) means, and do not involve metabolism.
A medical device is intended for use in:
- the diagnosis of disease or other conditions, or
- in the cure, mitigation, treatment, or prevention of disease
Some examples include pacemakers, infusion  pumps, the heart-lung machine, dialysis  machines, artificial organs, implants, artificial limbs, corrective lenses, cochlear implants, ocular prosthetics, facial prosthetics, somato  prosthetics, and dental implants.
Stereolithography is a practical example  of medical modeling being used to create physical objects. Beyond  modeling organs and the human body, emerging engineering techniques are  also currently used in the research and development of new devices for  innovative therapies, treatments, patient monitoring, and early diagnosis of complex diseases.
Medical devices are regulated and classified (in the US) as follows  (see also Regulation):
- Class I devices present minimal potential for harm to the user and  are often simpler in design than Class II or Class III devices. Devices  in this category include tongue depressors, bedpans, elastic bandages,  examination gloves, and hand-held surgical instruments and other similar  types of common equipment.
- Class II devices are subject to special controls in addition to the  general controls of Class I devices. Special controls may include  special labeling requirements, mandatory performance standards, and  postmarket surveillance. Devices in this class are typically  non-invasive and include x-ray machines, PACS, powered wheelchairs,  infusion pumps, and surgical drapes.
- Class III devices generally require premarket approval (PMA) or  premarket notification (510k), a scientific review to ensure the  device's safety and effectiveness, in addition to the general controls  of Class I. Examples include replacement heart valves, hip and knee  joint implants, silicone gel-filled breast implants, implanted  cerebellar stimulators, implantable pacemaker pulse generators and  endosseous (intra-bone) implants.  

 Biomedical instrumentation amplifier  schematic used in monitoring low voltage biological signals, an example  of a biomedical engineering application of electronic engineering to electrophysiology
Medical imaging
Medical/Biomedical Imaging is a major segment of Medical Devices.  This area deals with enabling clinicians to directly or indirectly  "view" things not visible in plain sight (such as due to their size,  and/or location). This can involve utilizing ultrasound, magnetism, UV,  other radiology, and other means.
Imaging technologies are often essential to medical diagnosis, and  are typically the most complex equipment found in a hospital including:
- Fluoroscopy
- Magnetic resonance imaging (MRI)
- Nuclear Medicine
- Positron  Emission Tomography (PET) PET scansPET-CT scans
- Projection Radiography such as X-rays and CT scans
- Tomography
- Ultrasound
- Optical  Microscopy
- Electron Microscopy
  
Implants
An implant is a kind of medical device made to replace and act as a  missing biological structure (as compared with a transplant, which  indicates transplanted biomedical tissue). The surface of implants that  contact the body might be made of a biomedical material such as  titanium, silicone or apatite depending on what is the most functional.  In some cases implants contain electronics e.g. artificial pacemaker and  cochlear implants. Some implants are bioactive, such as subcutaneous  drug delivery devices in the form of implantable pills or drug-eluting  stents.
 A prosthetic eye, an  example of a biomedical engineering application of mechanical engineering and biocompatible materials to ophthalmology
Clinical engineering
Clinical engineering is the branch of  biomedical engineering dealing with the actual implementation of medical equipment and technologies in hospitals or other  clinical settings. Major roles of clinical engineers include training  and supervising biomedical equipment technicians  (BMETs), selecting technological products/services and logistically  managing their implementation, working with governmental regulators on  inspections/audits, and serving as technological consultants for other  hospital staff (e.g. physicians, administrators, I.T., etc.). Clinical  engineers also advise and collaborate with medical device producers  regarding prospective design improvements based on clinical experiences,  as well as monitor the progression of the state-of-the-art so as to  redirect procurement patterns accordingly.
Their inherent focus on practical implementation of technology  has tended to keep them oriented more towards incremental-level  redesigns and reconfigurations, as opposed to revolutionary research  & development or ideas that would be many years from clinical  adoption; however, there is a growing effort to expand this time-horizon  over which clinical engineers can influence the trajectory of  biomedical innovation. In their various roles, they form a "bridge"  between the primary designers and the end-users, by combining the  perspectives of being both 1) close to the point-of-use, while 2)  trained in product and process engineering. Clinical Engineering  departments will sometimes hire not just biomedical engineers, but also  industrial/systems engineers to help address operations  research/optimization, human factors, cost analysis, etc. Also see safety engineering for a discussion of the procedures  used to design safe systems.