Archives: 3/2008

Art

43654welc Wellcome Image Awards 2008

Annie Cavanagh Breast cancer cells
A cluster of breast cancer cells showing visual evidence of programmed cell death (apoptosis) in yellow.

The Wellcome Trust has just announced the winners of this year’s Wellcome Image Awards (previously known as the Biomedical Image Awards):

The 22 award-winning images for this year all have a fascinating story to tell, including:

  • Red blood cells oozing from a ruptured vessel – revealing how a genetic mutation can lead to haemorrhaging similar to that seen in the blood vessels that feed developing cancers, by Anne Weston, Cancer Research UK.
  • The image of a circle of DNA, created using a molecular dynamics simulation to study whether clay nanomaterials could have played a role in the origins of life by protecting DNA in extreme conditions, has been made by Mary-Ann Thyveetil of University College London.
  • A mouse embryo, using a new technique – optical projection tomography – to examine internal structures, without the need for cutting sections, by James Sharpe Human Genetics Unit in Edinburgh.
  • Image of crystals of oxidised vitamin C by Spike Walker reveals the beautiful, almost marine-like shapes created by the crystallisation of this important vitamin. The ease with which vitamin C is oxidised is vitally important in protecting cells from damaging free radicals.
  • More after the jump. Take a stroll through an online gallery: Wellcome Image Awards 2008
    Press release…

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    inflated ThermoSuit Studied as an Adjunct Treatment for MIThermoSuit, a hypothermia water immersion system from Life Recovery Systems, HD, LLC, of Alexandria, LA, is now being tested in a study to determine the device’s ability to reduce post reperfusion infarct size in patients with acute MI, who are undergoing revascularization by angioplasty. We have originally covered the device back in September 2007.
    From the press release:

    Life Recovery Systems, HD, LLC announced today approval by the Food and Drug Administration (FDA) of an Investigational Device Exemption (IDE) application to investigate rapid hypothermia treatment in combination with primary angioplasty to treat heart attacks.
    Previous clinical data suggested early and rapid cooling before reperfusion therapy with primary angioplasty may potentially reduce infarct size post reperfusion. The study will enroll up to twenty patients at two institutions who present within six hours of symptom onset and require PCI to restore blood flow to the heart. Patients will receive hypothermia with the Life Recovery Systems ThermoSuit(R) non-invasive cooling system. Cooling will be performed in the emergency room within 60 minutes of arrival and cooling time is to be less than 30 minutes to avoid prolonging door-to-balloon time beyond 90 minutes.
    The study is co-chaired by Dr. Paul McMullan and Dr. Christopher White, Chairman of Cardiology for Ochsner Health System in New Orleans, LA.
    In the Cool MI I trial a subset of patients with anterior infarctions and whose temperature at the time of reperfusion was below 35 degrees C (26% of all anterior MI’s in the cooled group) had a significantly smaller infarction (9.3% of the left ventricular mass in the cooled population vs. 18.2% in the control group p=0.05) than the control group, said Dr. Paul McMullan.
    The goal of this pilot study is to confirm the feasibility and efficacy of external thin film liquid cooling to achieve “target” temperature within 30 minutes or less, and to demonstrate ease of maintenance of target temperature for three hours following removal of the patient from ThermoSuit(R). Primary safety endpoints data will also be collected. If this trial successfully achieves it its endpoints, a larger prospective randomized trial will be conducted.

    Sounds honky dory? Not really. At least not yet. Hypothermia has its own bunch of issues: coagulopathy, arrythmogenic potential, and many more. So we’ll wait and see what the study shows.
    Press release: Life Recovery Systems Study of Heart Attack With ThermoSuit(R) System…
    Life Recovery Systems…

    5344ootr Synthetic Superheroes Battle SuperbugsResearchers at Stanford University’s Department of Bioengineering have successfully created synthetic anti-microbial molecules that function as broad-spectrum antibiotics that disrupt bacterial membranes but leave mammalian cells intact. These molecules, called peptoids, may lead to an way of stemming the ever-growing menace of drug-resistant bacterial infections, which, by some estimates, are responsible for more US deaths than AIDS.

    “Peptoids could be an entirely new class of antibiotic drugs, which would be hugely important,” said Annelise Barron, associate professor of bioengineering at Stanford and senior author of a paper describing the research in the Feb. 26 issue of Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences.
    Anti-microbial peptides are evolutionarily ancient infection fighters found in organisms from grasses to amphibians to humans. In the human body, the peptides show up in the mouth, lungs and intestines, and in body fluids like sweat and tears. Anti-microbial peptides target a variety of pathogens and generally kill by punching holes in the invaders’ cell membranes.
    “You can think of these types of antibiotics as the body’s ‘land mines’ against invading pathogens,” Barron said.
    Because of this, bacterial resistance to the peptides is rarely observed. Bacteria can thwart other anti-microbial drugs by inactivating the drug, pumping it out of the cell, altering the drug’s binding site so it is no longer recognized or working around the specific cell part attacked by the drug.
    But it is much tougher for bacteria to develop resistance to the damage caused by anti-microbial peptides. “The bacteria can’t fundamentally alter their entire outer membrane,” Barron said.
    …Peptoids are synthetic molecules–oligomers–with structures that are similar to those of anti-microbial peptides, and offer the potential to overcome many of the problems associated with the natural molecules. Peptoids are much less susceptible to degradation in the stomach and bloodstream than peptides, so they will last longer in the body. They are also less expensive to produce than peptides, Barron said.
    Barron and her colleagues had these peptoids tested against six strains of pathogenic bacteria. The peptoids showed anti-bacterial properties almost identical to those of the natural peptides.
    “They did beautifully,” Barron said. “They appear to be broad-spectrum antibiotics that interact and interfere with bacterial cell membranes analogously to the way these peptides do.”
    To see if the peptoids would be harmful to human cells, the researchers combined them with human red blood cells in the laboratory. They also mixed them with mammalian lung cells and skin cells. At their active concentrations, the peptoids left the mammalian cells unharmed.

    Press Release: Synthetic peptoids hold forth promise for new antibiotics
    Abstract: Peptoids that mimic the structure, function, and mechanism of helical antimicrobial peptides
    Image credit: Wellcome Images: Clostridium on gut lining
    NOTE: Please welcome Ms Kapa Lenkov, a graduate student at the Dept. of Biology at Stanford, as our new editor. This is her first post for Medgadget. She will be reporting on some of the most interesting news coming out of bench research. Her particular interests are in the following areas of biology: neuroscience, behavior and epigenetics.

    3634ball Stronger Balls and Thinner Condoms: Promises, Promises...Dr Darren Martin at the Australian Institute for Bioengineering and Nanotechnology at the University of Queensland, developed a militarized polyurethane coating by adding special nanoparticles that tend to increases the strength of thermoplastic polyurethane elastomers:

    Dr Martin, a materials scientist with UQ’s Australian Institute for Bioengineering and Nanotechnology, has developed a unique polyurethane coating that is thinner, stronger and more flexible than what is currently available and could lead to better golf balls and condoms.
    The secret to his discovery is synthetic nanoparticles – nanoscale disc-like particles –that can be added to conventional thermoplastic polyurethane (TPU) to extend its benefits and performance. TPUs are used in everything from surfing leg ropes and rollerblade wheels, to soles on shoes and textiles and fabrics like Lycra.
    And while many great scientific discoveries can be attributed to a burning desire to help humankind, Dr Martin’s inspiration was much simpler.
    “I’m a single-figure golfer and I was getting frustrated with paying a lot of money for balls that only end up getting damaged after a few holes,” Dr Martin said.
    “We had been working with these nanocomposites for a while and this just seemed like a natural fit.
    “By coating the ball in a thin layer of our new polyurethane it can make them much more scuff resistant.”
    While in talks with a golf ball manufacturer now, Dr Martin and his team are also exploring other applications.
    “The condom is another example of where our technology might be applied,” he said.
    “We could make softer and thinner condoms that allow greater sensitivity and are actually stronger than current ones, while also reducing the risk of allergic response which some people have to latex rubber. We can all see the advantages of that application.”
    Not limited to the golf green and the bedroom, Dr Martin said the potential applications for the technology are expanding.
    “Wherever polyurethane is used, our technology can be used,” he said.

    The university wants to commercialize its nanotechnology via TenasiTech Pty Ltd, a start-up company, whose prospectus you can see below:

    Read this doc on Scribd: TenasiTech%20V1
    TenasiTech Pty Ltd The Technology TenasiTech Pty Ltd is commercialising a materials science breakthrough that increases the strength of thermoplastic polyurethane elastomers whilst maintaining its flexibility. Themoplastic Elastomers with Superior Strength and Flexibility This technology was invented by Dr Darren Martin of the Australian Institute for Bioengineering and Nanotechnology. It is the first successful demonstration of TPU nanocomposites, reinforced with small amounts of synthetic clay particles. A number of novel TPU materials have been produced exhibiting the following physical pr


    Press release: Thinner, stronger and more flexible research…

    OTC

    5638er Free Radical Enzymatic Device (FRED): We Definitely Are Not ReadyPulse Health, a Portland, OR company, has secured $2.15M in Series A financing to further develop and market its line of products that “target the antioxidant supplement channel.” In case you don’t know what the antioxidant supplement channel is, neither do we. (And, you know, we have a pretty diverse group of people around here: some are still in medical school, others in residency, and others are in practice.) To make us more flabbergasted , the company’s “flagship” product is a noninvasive breath test device that supposedly “detects free radicals through a colorimetric reaction”, and spews out a “free radical level baseline ‘number.’”
    Now comes the real fluff from the company:

    The FRED System allows consumers to measure their metabolic baseline and guide them in a scientifically grounded health and wellness program. FRED tests will be able to help identify the effects of diet, stress, supplements, and everyday living based on free radical levels in individuals. Once armed with this critical information, consumers can create optimal, enhanced lifestyle programs built around stress-reduction techniques like a healthy diet, regular exercise and supplementation.

    Are you a skeptic like we are? What do you think?
    Product page: FRED…
    Press release: Pulse Health Successfully Closes Series “A” Round…

    kfhnovofrontweb KFH Novo Wound Healing Device Approved by EUKingfisher Medical just received the CE Mark of approval from the European Union to market its Novo wound healing device. The handheld unit delivers small levels of electric current when placed in proximity to the wound, and that supposedly speeds up ATP production and overall healing of tissue around the damaged area.
    The following is from the company’s pitch:

  • Attracting the right cells to the wound area e.g. keratinocytes (cells which make up 90% of the outer layer of skin called the epidermis)
  • Stimulating fibroblast cells to activate wound healing
  • Increasing the production of ATP, providing energy to restart tissue healing
  • Increasing the blood and oxygen supply to wound beds
  • KFH press release
    Product page

    523epiret1 Epi Ret Retinal ImplantAt Aachen University Clinic and the Fraunhofer Institute for Microelectronic Circuits in Germany, scientists are developing an epiretinal implant for people suffering from retinitis pigmentosa, reports EETimes. (Epiretinal means the prosthesis is placed on the surface of a patient’s damaged retina.) The device, capable of displaying images to the patient, was designed to receive both the video signal and the electricity necessary to power the implant wirelessly.
    From EETimes:

    Presently, the device is equipped with 25 stimulating electrodes that are connected with ganglion cells. While the researchers admit that this is far from providing an actual eyesight experience, test persons said they were able to “see” electronically generated patterns or a coarse impression of the images they received.
    The technology also helps eye specialist to simplify the implantation of such devices into the human eye. In comparison to wire-bound implants, the wireless device is much easier to implant into the eye and to wear, the university clinic said.

    More details from the project page at RWTH Aachen University:
    523epiret2 Epi Ret Retinal Implant

    About 3 million people worldwide suffer from retinitis pigmentosa, making this one of the leading causes for blindness. In retinitis pigmentosa patients a slow and progressive degeneration of photoreceptors is observed, while about 30% of the retina’s ganglion cells remain intact. These ganglion cells are connected to the visual cortex of the brain via the optic nerve. Hence electrical stimulation of the remaining intact ganglion cells by placing micro electrodes onto the retina can in principal lead to visual sensation.
    The idea is that the patient wears a pair of glasses which have an integrated CMOS camera. An image of the environment is taken and processed by a digital signal processor (the so-called retina encoder), which calculates a stimulation pattern for the electrodes placed onto the retina that reproduces the original image. Data and energy are then transferred via RF coupling to the implant inside the patient’s eye. Here a silicon chip generates bipolar current pulses that stimulate the intact ganglion cells of the retina via three-dimensional micro electrodes.

    More from EETimes
    Those of you that are interested in the latest state of affairs in the world of retinal prostheses, should check out this excellent review at R&D Magazine, or look over Medgadget’s retinal prostheses archives.

    drtom Possibility of Hacking Implanted Defibrillators DemonstratedA study by researchers at Harvard Medical School, University of Massachusetts, and University of Washington, has shown the possibility of hackers interfering with implanted defibrillators, including downloading sensitive information and reprogramming the device to the detriment of the patient.
    From the Wall Street Journal:

    The study, to be presented at a California computer-security conference in May, suggests manufacturers should consider how to stop unauthorized people from tampering with implanted medical devices that receive instructions via radio waves, a growing category that also includes spinal-cord simulators and drug-delivery pumps.
    “This report demonstrates that you can obtain private information without authorization. You can reprogram the device without authorization,” said William Maisel, a Harvard Medical School cardiologist and a co-author. But he cautioned that “our report is a theoretical risk, not an actual risk” and said there was no reason for anybody to consider removing a defibrillator.
    There are no known cases of malicious tampering with somebody else’s defibrillator, Dr. Maisel said. The authors withheld certain details of their experiment to prevent malicious people from repeating the procedure.

    More from the WSJ
    Flashbacks: ‘Hackers may target pacemaker technology’ ; When Hackers Attack Hospital; ‘Medical records are wide open to computer hackers’

    46345mih MIHARU Home Video Endoscope
    For the armchair dentist in you, the MIHARU video endoscope allows getting a checklist ready before seeing the tooth doctor, and can even help going over the work, once you’re back at home. The unit runs on a couple of batteries, features an LED light to illuminate the scene, and conveniently plugs into a standard RCA video port found on almost any TV set. The device also includes an adapter for viewing closeups of the skin. So what’s the best view? The uvula, of course.
    Product page
    (hat tip: Gizmodo)