New Device Can Heal With A Single Touch, and Even Repair Brain Injuries
A new device has been developed at The Ohio State University, which
turns cells into other types of cells required for treating diseased
conditions. During testing, one touch completely repaired injured legs
of mice over three weeks!
A new device developed at The Ohio State University can start healing organs in a “fraction of a second,” researchers say.
The technology, known as Tissue
Nanotransfection (TNT), has the potential to save the lives of car crash
victims and even deployed soldiers injured on site. It’s a dime-sized
silicone chip that “injects genetic code into skin cells, turning those
skin cells into other types of cells required for treating diseased
conditions,” according to a release.
In lab tests, one touch of TNT completely repaired
injured legs of mice over three weeks by turning skin cells into
vascular cells.
And, it not only works on skin cells, it can
restore any type of tissue, Chandan Sen, director of the Center for
Regenerative Medicine and Cell-Based Therapies, said. For example, the
technology restored brain function in a mouse who suffered a stroke by
growing brain cells on its skin.
This is a breakthrough technology, because it’s the
first time cells have been reprogrammed in a live body. Current cell
therapy methods are high risk, like those that introduce a virus, and
include multiple steps, a new study published in Nature Nanotechnology points out. There are no known side effects to TNT and treatment is less than a second, Sen said.
“This technology does not require a laboratory or
hospital and can actually be executed in the field,” Sen said. “It’s
less than 100 grams to carry and will have a long shelf life.”
It is awaiting FDA approval, but Sen, who has been
working on this for four years, expects TNT will be tested on humans
within the year. He says he’s talking with Walter Reed National Medical
Center now.
“We are proposing the use of skin as an agricultural land where you can essentially grow any cell of interest,” Sen said




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