Subscribe free to our newsletters via your
. Solar Energy News .




TECH SPACE
Bio-inspired glue keeps hearts securely sealed
by Staff Writers
Boston MA (SPX) Jan 16, 2014


The waterproof, light-activated glue developed by researchers at Brigham and Women's Hospital, Boston Children's Hospital and Massachusetts Institute of Technology can successfully secure biodegradable patches to seal holes in a beating heart. Credit: Karp Laboratory.

When a child is born with a heart defect such as a hole in the heart, the highly invasive therapies are challenging due to an inability to quickly and safely secure devices inside the heart. Sutures take too much time to stitch and can cause stress on fragile heart tissue, and currently available clinical adhesives are either too toxic or tend to lose their sticking power in the presence of blood or under dynamic conditions, such as in a beating heart.

"About 40,000 babies are born with congenital heart defects in the United States annually, and those that require treatment are plagued with multiple surgeries to deliver or replace non-degradable implants that do not grow with young patients," says Jeffrey Karp, PhD, Division of Biomedical Engineering, BWH Department of Medicine, co-senior study author of a new study that may improve how surgeons treat congenital heart defects.

The study will be published on January 8, 2014, in Science Translational Medicine.

In the preclinical study, researchers from Boston Children's Hospital, BWH and Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT) developed a bio-inspired adhesive that could rapidly attach biodegradable patches inside a beating heart-in the exact place where congenital holes in the heart occur, such as with ventricular heart defects.

Recognizing that many creatures in nature have secretions that are viscous and repel water, enabling them to attach under wet and dynamic conditions, the researchers developed a material with these properties that also is biodegradable, elastic and biocompatible. According to the study authors, the degradable patches secured with the glue remained attached even at increased heart rates and blood pressure.

"This adhesive platform addresses all of the drawbacks of previous systems in that it works in the presence of blood and moving structures," says Pedro del Nido, MD, Chief of Cardiac Surgery, Boston Children's Hospital, co-senior study author. "It should provide the physician with a completely new, much simpler technology and a new paradigm for tissue reconstruction to improve the quality of life of patients following surgical procedures."

Unlike current surgical adhesives, this new adhesive maintains very strong sticking power when in the presence of blood, and even in active environments.

"This study demonstrated that the adhesive was strong enough to hold tissue and patches onto the heart equivalent to suturing," says the study's co-first author Nora Lang, MD, Department of Cardiac Surgery, Boston Children's Hospital. "Also, the adhesive patch is biodegradable and biocompatible, so nothing foreign or toxic stays in the bodies of these patients."

Importantly, its adhesive abilities are activated with ultraviolent (UV) light, providing an on-demand, anti-bleeding seal within five seconds of UV light application when applied to high-pressure large blood vessels and cardiac wall defects.

"When we attached patches coated with our adhesive to the walls of a beating heart, the patches remained despite the high pressures of blood flowing through the heart and blood vessels," says Maria N. Pereira, PhD, Division of Biomedical Engineering, BWH Department of Medicine, co-first study author.

The researchers note that their waterproof, light-activated adhesive will be useful in reducing the invasiveness of surgical procedures, as well as operating times, in addition to improving heart surgery outcomes.

"We are delighted to see the materials we developed being extended to new applications with the potential to greatly improve human life," said Robert Langer, ScD, MIT, study author.

The adhesive technology (and other related platforms) has been licensed to a start-up company, Gecko Biomedical, based in Paris. The company has raised 8 million Euros in their recently announced Series A financing round and expects to bring the adhesive to the market within two to three years.

.


Related Links
Brigham and Women's Hospital
Space Technology News - Applications and Research






Comment on this article via your Facebook, Yahoo, AOL, Hotmail login.

Share this article via these popular social media networks
del.icio.usdel.icio.us DiggDigg RedditReddit GoogleGoogle




Memory Foam Mattress Review
Newsletters :: SpaceDaily :: SpaceWar :: TerraDaily :: Energy Daily
XML Feeds :: Space News :: Earth News :: War News :: Solar Energy News





TECH SPACE
Starting Fire With Water
Huntsville AL (SPX) Jan 14, 2014
When firefighters want to extinguish a blaze, they often douse it with water. Astronauts on board the ISS, however, are experimenting with a form of water that does the opposite. Instead of stopping fire, this water helps start it. "We call it 'supercritical water,'" says Mike Hicks of the Glenn Research Center in Ohio. "And it has some interesting properties." Water becomes supercritical ... read more


TECH SPACE
NREL Finds a New Cellulose Digestion Mechanism by a Fast-eating Enzyme

More to biofuel production than yield

Inexpensive technique could drive down costs of biofuel production

York scientists' significant step forward in biofuels quest

TECH SPACE
Robots invade consumer market for play, work

Electronic 'mother' watches over home

Wall-Crawling Gecko Robots Can Stick In Space Too

Geckos in space: Novel robot takes a step to cosmos

TECH SPACE
German wind farm operator Prokon warns of imminent insolvency

China to Power Ahead as Wind Turbine Rotor Blade Market Leader for Foreseeable Future

Wind Turbines Begin Providing Renewable Energy at Honda Transmission Plant in Ohio

No Evidence of Residential Property Impacts Near Wind Turbines

TECH SPACE
Battery development may extend range of electric cars

Volvo Cars says it switched back into profit in 2013

EU cuts CO2 emissions for vans by 28%

The car of the future, today

TECH SPACE
Fusion instabilities lessened by unexpected effect

Organic mega flow battery promises breakthrough for renewable energy

Violence Threatens to Thwart Iraqi Oil Resurgence

Acid mine drainage reduces radioactivity in fracking waste

TECH SPACE
TEPCO to siphon off radioactive water from tunnels under Fukushima plant

India and South Korea to cooperate on nuclear power?

Japan approves TEPCO business plan to switch on reactors

Japan's Toshiba to buy 60% stake in British nuclear firm

TECH SPACE
US power plant emissions down

Li's Power Assets to spin off HK unit

Obama sets up quadrennial review of U.S. energy strategy

US energy secretary delays India trip amid row

TECH SPACE
Microbe community changes may reduce Amazon's ability to lock up carbon dioxide

Iconic Australasian trees found as fossils in South America

Climate scientists bark up the big tree

Long-term overstory and understory change following logging and fire exclusion in a Sierra Nevada mixed-conifer forest




The content herein, unless otherwise known to be public domain, are Copyright 1995-2014 - Space Media Network. AFP, UPI and IANS news wire stories are copyright Agence France-Presse, United Press International and Indo-Asia News Service. ESA Portal Reports are copyright European Space Agency. All NASA sourced material is public domain. Additional copyrights may apply in whole or part to other bona fide parties. Advertising does not imply endorsement,agreement or approval of any opinions, statements or information provided by Space Media Network on any Web page published or hosted by Space Media Network. Privacy Statement