PRESS-NEWS.org - Press Release Distribution
PRESS RELEASES DISTRIBUTION

Breakthrough drug-eluting patch stops scar growth and reduces scar tissues

Breakthrough  drug-eluting patch stops scar growth and reduces scar tissues
2014-06-23
(Press-News.org) Scars — in particular keloid scars that result from overgrowth of skin tissue after injuries or surgeries — are unsightly and can even lead to disfigurement and psychological problems of affected patients. Individuals with darker pigmentation — in particular people with African, Hispanic or South-Asian genetic background — are more likely to develop this skin tissue disorder. Current therapy options, including surgery and injections of corticosteroids into scar tissues, are often ineffective, require clinical supervision and can be costly.

A new invention by researchers from Nanyang Technological University in Singapore (reported in the current issue of TECHNOLOGY) provides a simple, affordable and — most importantly — highly effective way for patients to self-treat keloid scars. The team of scientists and engineers from NTU's School of Chemical and Biomedical Engineering, in collaboration with clinicians from Singapore's National Skin Centre, have developed a special patch made from polymers fabricated into microneedles, which are loaded with the US food and drug administration (FDA)-approved scar-reducing drug, 5-fluorouracil. Self-administered by patients, the microneedles attach the patch to scar tissue and allow sustained drug-release (one patch per night). The drug as well as the physical contact of the microneedles with the scar tissue contributes to the efficacy of the device, leading to the cessation of scar tissue growth and a considerable reduction of keloids as demonstrated in laboratory cultures and experiments with animals. "Most patients seek treatment due to disfigurement and/or pain or itch of scars," says Assistant Professor Xu Chenjie from NTU who leads the study. "We wanted to develop a simple, convenient, and cost-effective device able to inhibit keloid growth in skin tissue and reduce the size of disfiguring scars," adds Yuejun Kang, another key investigator in the study from NTU.

"Self-administered treatment for keloid scars can reduce the economic burden on the healthcare system and provide a treatment option for patients who have limited access to medical care," comments Professor Jeffrey Karp from Brigham and Women's Hospital at Harvard Medical School, US, an expert on medical device design who was not involved in this study.

INFORMATION: The research was supported by a start-up grant from NTU, Tier-1 Academic Research Funds from the Singapore Ministry of Education, and an Ignition Grant from the Singapore-MIT Alliance for Research and Technology (SMART) program.

Corresponding authors for this study in TECHNOLOGY are Chenjie Xu (cjxu@ntu.edu.sg) or Yuejun Kang (yuejun.kang@ntu.edu.sg). The article can be found at‎http://www.technologythejournal.com/news/breaking-news-23.pdf

[Attachments] See images for this press release:
Breakthrough  drug-eluting patch stops scar growth and reduces scar tissues

ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:

D-Wave and predecessors: From simulated to quantum annealing

2014-06-23
The D-Wave computer is currently the latest link of a long chain of computers designed for the solution of optimization problems. In what sense does it realize quantum computation? We describe the evolution of such computers and confront the different views concerning the quantum properties of the D-wave computer. Quantum algorithms show several benefits over classical ones. One strong example suggested by Shor in 1994 is the ability to factor numbers which can be effectively done on a quantum computer but is very hard on a classical computer. However, the actual model ...

New data bolsters Higgs boson discovery

2014-06-23
If evidence of the Higgs boson revealed two years ago was the smoking gun, particle physicists at Rice University and their colleagues have now found a few of the bullets. The European Organization for Nuclear Research (CERN) published research in Nature Physics this week that details evidence of the direct decay of the Higgs boson to fermions, among the particles anticipated by the Standard Model of physics. The finding fits what researchers expected to see amid the massive amount of data provided by the Large Hadron Collider (LHC). The world's largest collider smashed ...

MIT researchers unveil experimental 36-core chip

2014-06-23
CAMBRIDGE, MA -- The more cores — or processing units — a computer chip has, the bigger the problem of communication between cores becomes. For years, Li-Shiuan Peh, the Singapore Research Professor of Electrical Engineering and Computer Science at MIT, has argued that the massively multicore chips of the future will need to resemble little Internets, where each core has an associated router, and data travels between cores in packets of fixed size. This week, at the International Symposium on Computer Architecture, Peh's group unveiled a 36-core chip that features just ...

Anti-androgen therapy for triple-negative breast cancer may benefit lower-androgen tumors

2014-06-23
Triple-negative breast cancers do not benefit from the targeted therapies that have greatly improved the survival of patients with other subtypes of breast cancer. But recent work shows that while these cancers lack estrogen receptors, progesterone receptors, and aren't driven by the gene HER2, up to a third of these tumors express the androgen receptor – clinical trials are underway to inhibit the androgen receptor in these tumors in much the same way that the drug Tamoxifen inhibits estrogen receptor in estrogen-receptor-positive breast cancers. A new University of Colorado ...

Study finds minimum payment warnings nudge credit card payments up AND down

2014-06-23
Chestnut Hill, MA (June 23, 2014): If you were warned how much extra credit card interest you'd pay by only making the minimum payment every month, you might want to increase your payments to retire the balance earlier, right? Not necessarily, according to a study by a Boston College marketing researcher who found that telling customers about the high cost of repaying the monthly minimum had little impact on repayment decisions. But when credit card consumers were shown a three-year payoff time frame with accompanying lower interest costs, this information "nudge" had ...

Gestures that speak

2014-06-23
Have you ever found yourself gesticulating – and felt a bit stupid for it – while talking on the phone? You're not alone: it happens very often that people accompany their speech with hand gestures, sometimes even when no one can see them. Why can't we keep still while speaking? "Because gestures and words very probably form a single "communication system", which ultimately serves to enhance expression intended as the ability to make oneself understood", explains Marina Nespor, a neuroscientist at the International School for Advanced Studies (SISSA) of Trieste. Nespor, ...

Poor awareness of the proper injection techniques adversely affects glucose control

2014-06-23
CHICAGO, IL — Diabetic patients who don't know proper injection techniques may administer insulin incorrectly, leading to poor glycemic control and adverse outcomes, a new study from Iraq finds. The results were presented in a poster Monday, June 23 at ICE/ENDO 2014, the joint meeting of the International Society of Endocrinology and the Endocrine Society in Chicago. "Lack of simple education about proper injection techniques could be blamed for many complications and adverse outcomes. I thought about conducting this study after managing two teenage patients who suffered ...

A new spider species from Mexico uses soil particles for camouflage

A new spider species from Mexico uses soil particles for camouflage
2014-06-23
Scientists discover and describe a new species of spider from Mexico. The new species belongs to the enigmatic family Paratropididae that is distinguished by representatives who possess unique camouflaging abilities. The study was published in the open access journal ZooKeys. Like all species form the family the new species Paratropis tuxtlensis has its entire body encrusted with soil particles. The encrusted soil on the exoskeleton could provide protection from predators or serve as camouflage to deceive their prey. The encrusted soil particles are because this species ...

Spectral 'ruler' is first standardized way to measure stars

Spectral ruler is first standardized way to measure stars
2014-06-23
Previously, as with the longitude problem 300 years earlier for fixing locations on Earth, there was no unified system of reference for calibrating the heavens. But now, when investigating the atmospheric structure and chemical make-up of stars, astronomers can use a new stellar scale as a 'ruler' – making it much easier for them to classify and compare data on star discoveries. In fact, the work is a critical first step in the Gaia satellite's mission to map the Milky Way, as the unprecedented levels of stellar data that will result need "consistent stellar parameters", ...

Sharper imaging using X-rays

Sharper imaging using X-rays
2014-06-23
In the future, this kind of novel X-ray optics should be available to users at the BESSY II synchrotron source. Among many applications, the improved resolution permits investigations on ultrastructural features in biological specimens as well as studies on nanostructures in novel battery systems. The wavelength of light limits resolution in microscopy. Visible light can resolve structures on the order of a quarter micron, while the considerably shorter wavelength of X-rays can in principle resolve features down to a few nanometres. In addition, X-rays can also penetrate ...

LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:

Nationally renowned anesthesiology physician-scientist and clinical operations leader David Mintz, MD, PhD, named Chair of the Department of Anesthesiology at the UM School of Medicine

Clean water access improves child health in Mozambique, study shows

Study implicates enzyme in neurodegenerative conditions

Tufts professor named Fellow of the National Academy of Inventors

Tiny new device could enable giant future quantum computers

Tracing a path through photosynthesis to food security

First patient in Arizona treated with new immune-cell therapy at HonorHealth Research Institute

Studies investigate how AI can aid clinicians in analyzing medical images

Researchers pitch strategies to identify potential fraudulent participants in online qualitative research

Sweeping study shows similar genetic factors underlie multiple psychiatric disorders

How extreme weather events affect agricultural trade between US states

Smallholder farms maintain strong pollinator diversity – even when far from forests

Price of a bot army revealed across hundreds of online platforms worldwide – from TikTok to Amazon

Warblers borrow color-related genes from evolutionary neighbors, study finds

Heat signaling from plants is an ancient pollinator signal

New index reveals the economics underlying the online manipulation economy

High-resolution satellite observations reveal facility-level methane emissions worldwide

Researchers discover how Ebola and Marburg disrupt the gastrointestinal tract

Feeling the heat

Eastward earthquake rupture progression along the Main Marmara Fault towards Istanbul

Scientists uncover how Earth’s mantle locked away vast water in early magma ocean

Scientists uncover key driver of treatment-resistant cancer

Rare image of Tatooine-like planet is closest to its twin stars yet

Music: Popular song lyrics have become more negative since 1973

Marine ecology: Killer whales tail dolphins to hunt salmon

ADHD prescriptions on the rise, study finds

How to build a genome

Sharp rise in ADHD stimulant prescriptions in Ontario, research finds

Trends and prevalence of the metabolic syndrome among US adults

Population-level trends in ADHD medication prescribing

[Press-News.org] Breakthrough drug-eluting patch stops scar growth and reduces scar tissues