Medical

Self-powered biodegradable patch zaps broken bones to heal them

Self-powered biodegradable patch zaps broken bones to heal them
Prof. Xudong Wang with his FED (fracture electrostimulation device)
Prof. Xudong Wang with his FED (fracture electrostimulation device)
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The FED's substrate consists of poly(lactic-co-glycolic acid) polymer, or PLGA
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The FED's substrate consists of poly(lactic-co-glycolic acid) polymer, or PLGA
Prof. Xudong Wang with his FED (fracture electrostimulation device)
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Prof. Xudong Wang with his FED (fracture electrostimulation device)

Studies have already shown that electrical stimulation helps heal wounds, including broken bones. Scientists have now developed what could be a better way of delivering electricity to such bones, in the form of a biodegradable implant.

In order to electrically stimulate broken bones, externally powered electrodes would currently have to be surgically implanted at the wound site. Once the bone had healed, they would then need to be surgically removed.

Seeking a simpler, less invasive alternative, a team led by the University of Wisconsin-Madison's Prof. Xudong Wang created a self-powered electrical patch that is surgically placed onto a bone-break site, but that is harmlessly absorbed by the body once its job is done. It's called the fracture electrostimulation device, or FED.

The base of the device consists of an FDA-approved biocompatible polymer, on top of which is a thin-film triboelectric nanogenerator that's hooked up to two electrodes. That nanogenerator converts mechanical energy produced by body movements into an electrical current, much in the same way that rubbing your sock feet against the carpet produces a static charge. The electrodes deliver the current to the bone.

The FED's substrate consists of poly(lactic-co-glycolic acid) polymer, or PLGA
The FED's substrate consists of poly(lactic-co-glycolic acid) polymer, or PLGA

In lab tests, the device allowed rats to recover from a fractured tibia within six weeks, which was significantly quicker than the recovery time for an untreated control group. That said, the rats remained relatively active during the six-week period, so the nanogenerator was consistently able to produce about 4 volts. By contrast, humans are usually advised to immobilize limbs with broken bones.

"We may need the device to respond to other types of internal mechanical sources, like blood pressure changes," says Wang. "It will be very interesting and impactful to address the development from animal to human."

The research is described in a paper that was recently published in the journal Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences.

Scientists at the University of Connecticut are developing a technology that is similar, but also a bit different. It's a biodegradable piezoelectric material which is implanted at a bone fracture site, then proceeds to generate an electrical field when triggered by externally applied pulses of ultrasound.

Source: University of Wisconsin-Madison

1 comment
1 comment
HoppyHopkins
Electronic stimulation to heal wounds has been around since the "40s or "50s at least and are very common world wide, except in the US. But for some unknown reason, the American Medical Association has caused our government to ban it for everyone except diabetics and race horses in one of the most stupid actions perpetrated on Americans. This technology has been proven not only to work, it works as a rate much faster than natural healing, even if you heal as fast as I do