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View Full Version : Inkjet-like device 'prints' cells right over burns



Islander
04-09-10, 08:54 AM
Thu, Apr 8 2010
By Maggie Fox, Health and Science Editor

WINSTON-SALEM, North Carolina (Reuters) - Inspired by a standard office inkjet printer, U.S. researchers have rigged up a device that can spray skin cells directly onto burn victims, quickly protecting and healing their wounds as an alternative to skin grafts.
They have mounted the device, which has so far only been tested on mice, in a frame that can be wheeled over a patient in a hospital bed, they reported on Wednesday.
A laser can take a reading of the wound's size and shape so that a layer of healing skin cells can be precisely applied, said the team at Wake Forest University in Winston-Salem, North Carolina.
"We literally print the cells directly onto the wound," said student Kyle Binder, who helped design the device. "We can put specific cells where they need to go."
Tests on mice showed the spray system, called bioprinting, could heal wounds quickly and safely, the researchers reported at the Translational Regenerative Medicine Forumb.
"We were able to close the entire wound in two weeks," Binder said. Mice with plugs of skin removed that were not treated took five weeks to heal, he said.
The team will eventually seek U.S. Food and Drug Administration approval to test the device on humans, said George Christ, a professor of regenerative medicine at the school.
They are working with the U.S. Armed Forces Institute of Regenerative Medicine to come up with ways to help soldiers wounded in Iraq and Afghanistan. It could be used to close various types of wounds as well as burns.
Binder and colleagues dissolved human skin cells from pieces of skin, separating and purifying the various cell types such as fibroblasts and keratinocytes.
They put them in a nutritious solution to make them multiply and then used a system similar to a multicolor office inkjet printer to apply first a layer of fibroblasts and then a layer of keratinocytes, which form the protective outer layer of skin.
The wound on the mouse was completely closed by three weeks, they reported. Experts say victims of massive burns usually die of infection within two weeks unless they receive skin grafts, and normal grafting often leaves severe scars.
The sprayed cells also incorporated themselves into surrounding skin, hair follicles and sebaceous glands, probably because immature cells called stem cells were mixed in with the sprayed cells, the researchers said.
"You have to give a lot of credit to the cells. When you put them into the wound, they know what to do," Binder said.
The next step is to try the system on pigs, whose skin more closely resembles the skin of humans. Binder said it may also be useful for treating diabetic foot ulcers, a common problem. (Editing by Doina Chiacu)

http://tinyurl.com/y8ulghq

EmmaPeel
04-09-10, 10:54 AM
I saw a demonstration of this about a year ago on PBS...fascinating.
Implanting or inkjeting cells is great, but it would be the bodies acceptance of them that would be the clincher...

Some of the wounds I work with are so big you could put your whole hand in them....

Aaltrude
04-09-10, 03:45 PM
An interesting approach to treating burns.

On the home front, the best home remedy you can use if you get a burn is to place the moist side of potato peelings against the burn. Not only does it take the sting out of the burn, it heals them a lot quicker. I tried an experiment once by covering only half of a burn with potato peel. The next day the skin of the treated half was normal but the other half was red and blistered. This burn had been caused by contact with a hot iron. I would never use this as a subsitute for medical attention for a serious burn but with the results I have seen using this I would certainly always use it as the immediate treatment for any burn. It beats cold water hands down.

Islander
04-09-10, 03:52 PM
What about the aloe vera leaf?

Aaltrude
04-09-10, 03:57 PM
What about the aloe vera leaf?

I've never tried it but after the results I have had personally with potato peel, I don't see the need to try. We always have potatos on hand, we don't have any aloe vera. The one time we did try growing it was not successful.

mellowsong
04-09-10, 08:07 PM
This is talking about serious burns that require skin grafting, not things you can take care of yourself with stuff like aloe vera. These patients die in a hurry if something isn't used immediately to replace the dead skin.

Aaltrude
04-09-10, 08:30 PM
This is talking about serious burns that require skin grafting, not things you can take care of yourself with stuff like aloe vera. These patients die in a hurry if something isn't used immediately to replace the dead skin.

Yes, I appreciate that mellow, which is why I prefaced my comment with "On the home front". It is always useful to have the knowledge of effective home treatments for the not so serious burns.

DizzyIzzy
04-10-10, 03:44 AM
Manuka honey works a charm... one of my teachers had an electrical burn that tore through her cheek and left a black tear in it (electric fence wire snapped), was an awful wound. She used manuka honey on it and it healed so completely she doesn't even have a scar.

(Also on the home front, rather than the gaping wound with 3/4 body burnt severely front!)


I'm sure I've seen something similar in the past where they're spraying stem cells onto wounds with a printer-type machine, very very cool. Go technology go!

Not so keen on the poor mice in the experiment though, that's a bit harsh...

mellowsong
04-10-10, 10:08 AM
Yes, I appreciate that mellow, which is why I prefaced my comment with "On the home front". It is always useful to have the knowledge of effective home treatments for the not so serious burns.

Oops...that's what I get for speed scanning :) Sorry bout that.

Aaltrude
04-10-10, 12:03 PM
Oops...that's what I get for speed scanning :) Sorry bout that.

That's OK mellow. I'm sure with the time pressures most of us are speed reading a lot of what is posted here. 30