[UT Southwestern Medical Center]
[The National Science Foundation]
[Notes from Dr. RW]
[TIME]
[Kevin, M.D.]
[press release]
[BBC News]
[MIT Tech Review] (Flashbacks: LifeShirt)

Flexicath Ltd., an Israeli company, has obtained FDA clearance to market its version of PICC line (peripherally inserted central catheter) that offers an ability to insert the catheter from inside a specially designed sleeve:
The FirmGrip™ combines a standard catheter enclosed in a polymer sleeve with a special silicone insertion unit to produce a self-contained sterile catheter insertion field.
In this model, a soft midterm catheter (20 cm) encased in the compact sterile sleeve is inserted in a simple, efficient manner using Peel-away needle or standard IV canula as port of entry. Having the midterm catheter encased in the sterile sleeve reduces the chance of infection and the need for an external sterile environment. FirmGrip.15 provides physicians the flexibility to leave a soft catheter in place for midterm (up to 29 days) treatment periods.
AdvantagesSolution for midterm treatment (up to 29 days) Reduced risk of infection and touch contamination - Removes risk of glove powder contamination
- Eliminates chance of airborne pathogens accessing the catheterReduced insertion time with a simplified procedure Significantly lower procedure costs, with less staff time for preparation Safer, more accurate insertion technique Flexible treatment options
Product page…
Globes [online]: Flexicath receives FDA approval for first product …

A group of scientists under Dr. Eshel Ben-Jacob at Tel-Aviv University created an experiment that probably demonstrates for the first time the ability of interconnected neurons in vitro to store memories.
From the statement by the American Physical Society:
A new experiment has shown that it’s possible to store multiple rudimentary memories in an artificial culture of live neurons. The ability to record information in a manmade network of neurons is a step toward a cyborg-like integration of living material into memory chips. The advance also may help neurologists to understand how our brains learn and store information.
Itay Baruchi and Eshel Ben-Jacob of Tel-Aviv University used an array of electrodes to monitor the firing patterns in a network of linked neurons. As previous studies have shown, simply linking the neurons together leads them to spontaneously fire in coordinated patterns. In the study published this month in the journal Physical Review E the researchers found that they could deliberately create additional firing patterns that coexist with the spontaneous patterns. They claim that these new firing patterns essentially represent simple memories stored in the neuron network.
To create a new memory in the neurons, the researchers introduced minute amounts of a chemical stimulant into the culture at a selected location. The stimulant induced a second firing pattern, starting at that location. The new firing pattern in the culture along coexisted with the original pattern. Twenty-four hours later, they injected another round of stimulants at a new location, and a third firing pattern emerged. The three memory patterns persisted, without interfering with each other, for over forty hours.
In addition to producing the first chemically operated neuro-memory chip, the researchers propose that their work implies that chemical stimulation may be crucial to learning and memory formation in living organisms.
Abstract: Towards neuro-memory-chip: Imprinting multiple memories in cultured neural networks …
Press release: A living memory chip, black holes on the loose, and a clearer picture of ocean currents …
(hat tip: Engadget)
Also: Tel-Aviv University’s magazine has an expose of the work done by university’s scientists in the area of bio- and nanotech: TAU Review Spring 2007 (large .pdf file)
Here’s a link to the latest entry by Michael Berger at Nanowerk’s nanoBLOG about the way scientists try to mimic intracellular molecular processes to try to develop biomolecular-based computer systems.
Flashbacks: Computer with DNA Circuits Plays Games; One Day to Go Diagnostic; Nanoactuator, a DNA Switch
Mark Woodman, who’s 7-year-old son was diagnosed with sensory processing disorder (SPD), has a report in the latest Wired, as well as a blog diary, on the progress that the boy made since undergoing a month-long Sensory Learning Program in Boulder, Colorado.
The program, described on its website:
The Sensory Learning Program is a supra-modal approach to developmental learning that unites three modalities (auditory, visual and vestibular) into one 30-day drug-free intervention to improve perception, understanding, and the ability to learn.
Preceding the intervention, a listening profile and visual field measuring photocurrent are taken. These ‘perception maps’ help provide baselines that are used to customize the Program for the individual child. These evaluations are done throughout the Program to track improvement in sensory regulation.
The Sensory Learning Program is comprised of two 30-minute sessions each day for 12 consecutive days, including weekends and holidays. Each session is an individual sensory experience simultaneously engaging visual, auditory and vestibular systems to work in an integrated way. The repetitive sensory activation of each session builds on the session before.
After twelve days of sessions in the Sensory Learning Center International, the individual returns home with a portable light instrument to continue the program, with a 20-minute session each morning and evening for the next 18 days.
Hacking My Kid’s Brain: How a Child’s Neurons Were Rewired …
Sensory Learning Program…

The University of Cincinnati is reporting that a team of clinicians under David Hom, MD, an otolaryngologist, completed a study that demonstrated that a gel containing a patient’s own platelets (autologous platelet gel or APG) is more effective in promoting skin wound healing than a control antibiotic ointment:
It is believed to be one of the earliest preliminary studies comparing the effectiveness of APG on skin wounds in healthy humans.
Four male and four female volunteers aged 21-58 received five full-thickness skin punch wounds (4 mm diameter) on each thigh. APG was applied topically to the punch sites (one to two times) on one thigh and antibiotic ointment to the other, and the wounds were monitored for six months.
Over a 42-day period, the researchers found that skin wounds treated with APG had a statistically significant increased wound closure compared with the antibiotic-treated sites.
On day 14, the researchers report in the May/June 2007 issue of Archives of Facial Plastic Surgery, the APG-treated sites had a closure rate of 73.9 percent, while the control, antibiotic-treated sites closed at 49.6 percent. By day 17, 81.1 percent of the APG-treated sites closed, compared with 57.2 percent of the antibiotic sites.
Clinical analysis of the APG-treated sites also showed increased growth factor levels, which are essential in wound healing.
“Overall, some of the APG-treated wound sites healed two to three days faster,” says Hom. “That’s a significant amount of time. This may be especially useful for patients who are prone to poor healing, such those with diabetes.
“Accelerating normal wound healing could also improve the quality of life for patients post-op,” says Hom. “They may be able to leave the hospital sooner and get back to their regular routines more quickly.”
Hom says APG treatment on skin wounds may also help patients who typically heal poorly.
Press release: Patient’s Own Platelets May Speed Up Skin Wound Healing …
Abstract: The Healing Effects of Autologous Platelet Gel on Acute Human Skin Wounds

A new website from the World Cancer Research Fund aims to bring obesity fighting cartoon characters to the hungry eyes of kids:
The World Cancer Research Fund hopes that by using the health conscious characters on its new website it can encourage better eating and a more active lifestyle among its target audience of four to seven-year-olds.
Competitions, puzzles and stories aim to encourage children to learn more about food.
The site, launched this month, introduces children to a new world of fruit and vegetables they may not have tried before and encourages them to cook with them and even to grow them.
An innovative nano-sized vesicle encapsulation of single biomolecules (an in singulo technique of studying biomolecular behavior) is being reported by a group under Dr. Taekjip Ha at the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign:
In a Howard Hughes Medical Institute laboratory in Illinois, a new kind of “test tube,” one-thousandth the diameter of a human hair and small enough to hold only a few molecules of DNA, is revolutionizing the way researchers observe the behavior of single molecules of DNA, RNA, or proteins. The test tubes are actually bubble-like nanocontainers that are porous to small molecules. Researchers can easily feed needed ions and other chemicals into the ultra-tiny reaction chambers.
Many scientists say that more can be learned about the dynamics of chemical reactions that power biological processes by studying the behavior of individual molecules rather than observing the collective behavior of many molecules, as scientists do now. But techniques for single-molecule studies are limited and often highly specialized. The new nanocontainers, however, will make single-molecule techniques both more accessible and more powerful, said Taekjip Ha, a Howard Hughes Medical Institute investigator at the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign. Ha and his Illinois colleagues are the creative force behind the new technology…
“This technique enables study at the single-molecule level of any complex interactions between DNA, RNA and proteins that can be modulated by small molecules,” Ha explained. “These include how cancer drugs interfere with reactions central to the growth of tumors, and the mechanism by which motor proteins enable movement of molecules within the cell. It may even be possible to use this approach for ultrasensitive high-throughput screening of candidate drugs that can inhibit specific interactions between proteins.”
The researchers say their technique can be easily applied in other laboratories, to enable scientists to study individual molecular reactions free of the complications of analyzing reactions in bulk solution. The new approach also improves on other methods used for observing the behavior of single molecules. One of the most common methods required that single molecules be tethered to a surface. With nanocontainers, however, the vesicles themselves are attached to a surface, meaning the molecules inside do not have to be. This simplifies analysis, because the effects of the surface on the reaction do not have to be taken into account, the researchers said.
The researchers published their advance during the week of May 21, 2007, in the online Early Edition of the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences…
As a demonstration of the technique, Ha, Cisse, and their colleagues analyzed how a protein called RecA attaches to DNA to form filaments. RecA is a major component of a mechanism for repairing abnormal DNA, and filament formation is central to the repair process. The researchers trapped RecA and a DNA labeled with fluorescent dye molecules inside porous nanocontainers. They then infused ATP into the nanocontainers, and observed in detail how the ATP triggered RecA proteins to interact with DNA to uncoil the DNA to form filaments.
An expert in single-molecule study, Ha is particularly excited about this advance because of its broad applicability and ease of use. “I think this technique will go a long way toward my goal of commoditization of in singulo techniques, getting them out of specialists’ labs to the general research community,” he noted.
“The convenient thing about this technique is that it is a self-assembly process,” Cisse explained. “A researcher need only select the protein, DNA or other biomolecule they want to study, adjust the conditions for lipid encapsulation, and the vesicles will self-assemble, trapping the number of molecules they wish. We have provided information on how to design those conditions.” According to Cisse, the major drawback to the technique is that the pore size cannot be precisely controlled, but he and his colleagues are experimenting with bacterial toxin that introduces pores of a precise size into the nanocontainer membrane.
Press release: Researchers Create Molecule-Sized Test Tubes …
Single Molecule Biophysics Group at UIUC…
MIT Tech Review has an interesting article on where everyone’s favorite specialty is headed in the future. The article features technologies that are well known around here: Neurostar System by Neuronetics, a transcranial magnetic stimulation device, and Aspect Medical Systems’ BIS Monitor, that is undergoing a clinical trial to determine the device’s efficacy in detecting antidepressant response.