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

A mint idea becomes a game changer for medical devices

2026-02-05
(Press-News.org) Australian researchers have developed a high‑performance coating made from peppermint essential oil that can be applied to the surfaces of many commonly used medical devices, offering a safer way to protect patients from infection and inflammation.

Matthew Flinders Professor and senior author of the new study, Professor Krasimir Vasilev, says the idea emerged after noticing that eating peppermint leaves from his drink significantly relieved his sore throat, inspiring him to explore whether its bioactivity could be converted into a durable coating using plasma technology – something he has been researching for more than two decades.

The team from Flinders’s Biomedical Nanoengineering Laboratory - including Professor Vasilev (Director), Associate Professor Vi‑Khanh Truong, Dr Andrew Hayes, and PhD candidates Trong Quan Luu and Tuyet Pham - created a nanoscale peppermint‑oil coating that protects against infection, inflammation and oxidative stress, while remaining compatible with human tissue and suitable for medical materials.

In the study, the team used atmospheric pressure plasma to transform peppermint essential oil into an ultra-thin film that bonds tightly to the surface of all types of medical materials.

“This process does not require heating or harmful chemicals and preserves many of the biologically active groups within the oil,” says Professor Vasilev.

“Importantly, it is environmentally friendly since the energy required to run the process can be entirely sourced from renewable sources.

“It allows the fabrication of robust and stable coatings because the plasma reorganises the oil molecules into a cross linked structure that resists breakdown.”

Researchers first tested the coating on urinary catheters - devices frequently associated with infection and patient discomfort.

Co-author, Associate Professor Vi‑Khanh Truong says the peppermint coating removed up to 90% of harmful reactive oxygen species, limiting tissue damage and irritation.

“Catheter associated urinary tract infections are among the most common hospital acquired infections and significantly contribute to patient discomfort, extended hospital stays, greater treatment costs and increased mortality,” says Associate Professor Truong from the College of Medicine and Public Health.

“The plasma coating demonstrated strong antibacterial action against key pathogens such as E. coli and Pseudomonas aeruginosa, killing bacteria on contact without releasing drugs into the body.”

The study also found that the peppermint oil coating increased bacterial sensitivity to common antibiotics including colistin and levofloxacin, a finding that could help reduce antibiotic resistance.

“We found that the coating reduces pro inflammatory signals and increases anti-inflammatory signals, shifting immune cells toward a healing associated phenotype rather than an aggressive one,” says Dr Andrew Hayes.

“This response may help the body tolerate the presence of medical devices more comfortably.”

Laboratory testing confirmed that human cells grow normally on the coating and maintain healthy metabolic activity which proves that the peppermint based film is safe for contact with human tissue.

Beyond catheters, the coating can be applied to many kinds of medical devices, including those used in orthopaedic surgery and long term clinical care.

“The process also supports environmentally conscious manufacturing because it uses renewable peppermint oil and avoids solvent based methods. It can also be powered entirely by renewable sources,” says Professor Vasilev.

“The co-location of the Biomedical Nanoengineering Laboratory within Flinders Medical Centre facilitates close collaboration with doctors and nurses, ensuring that our research remains clinically relevant and strongly positioned for translation.”

The team hopes the discovery will inspire a new generation of medical coatings that harness natural compounds while improving patient comfort and reducing infection risks. They say they are keen to support further development of the technology and are actively seeking engagement with partners to help commercialise their discoveries.

Images available here

Acknowledgements: This research at Flinders University was conducted with experts from RMIT University (Melbourne, Australia).  Professor Vasilev is funded by a NHMRC Fellowship GNT1194466 and ARC grants DP220103543 and DP250101028. V.K.T thanks ARC for the grant FT240100067. A.H. thanks the Flinders Foundation for Health Seed Grant.

The article, ‘A Multifunctional Bioactive Nanoscale Coating Deposited by Atmospheric Pressure Plasma Polymerization of Peppermint Essential Oil,’ by Trong Quan Luu, Xuan Duy Do, Tuyet Pham, Ngoc Huu Nguyen, Richard Bright, Wenshao Li, Xiangyang Guo (RMIT University,Melbourne), Vi Khanh Truong  , Andrew Hayles and Krasimir Vasilev was published in Small journal. DOI: 10.1002/smll.202510552

END


ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:

Innovation at a crossroads: Virginia Tech scientist calls for balance between research integrity and commercialization

2026-02-05
As federal policymakers weigh potential changes to how biomedical research is funded and regulated in the United States, a Virginia Tech scientist highlights the importance of preserving the nation’s ability to turn discovery into life‑saving therapies. In a commentary published this week in Nature Biotechnology, Robert Gourdie, professor at the Fralin Biomedical Research Institute at VTC, notes that well‑intentioned but overly restrictive policies could inadvertently undermine the technology‑transfer ecosystem ...

Tropical peatlands are a major source of greenhouse gas emissions

2026-02-05
In Indonesia, Malaysia, and other parts of Southeast Asia, vast areas spanning up to 300,000 square kilometers have emerged over thousands of years as plants grow and thrive in dense tropical peat swamp forests, then die and slowly decompose in waterlogged, low-oxygen conditions. As a result, large amounts of carbon get stored in the soil rather than released into the atmosphere. Heavy rainfall keeps these landscapes flooded for much of the year, allowing layers of dead vegetation to build up and gradually compress into dense, carbon-rich peat. New research from Hokkaido University suggests that the ...

From cytoplasm to nucleus: A new workflow to improve gene therapy odds

2026-02-05
Gene therapy holds the promise of preventing and curing disease by manipulating gene expression within a patient's cells. However, to be effective, the new gene must make it into a cell’s nucleus. The inability to consistently, efficiently do so has hampered progress in advancing treatment. University of California San Diego researchers, led by Department of Biochemistry and Molecular Biophysics Professor Neal Devaraj’s lab, have unveiled a new method that greatly increases the efficacy of gene delivery while minimizing harmful side effects to the cell. Their work appears in Nature Communications. For ...

Three Illinois Tech engineering professors named IEEE fellows

2026-02-05
Professor of Electrical and Computer Engineering Lin Cai, Professor and Frank Gunsaulus Faculty Fellow in Mechanical and Aerospace Engineering Boris S. Pervan, and Professor Emeritus of Electrical and Computer Engineering Thomas Wong, all faculty members at Illinois Institute of Technology (Illinois Tech), have been selected as fellows of the Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers.   This distinction, reflecting their extraordinary accomplishments, is given to less than 0.1 percent of ...

Five mutational “fingerprints” could help predict how visible tumours are to the immune system

2026-02-05
Cancer cells carry thousands of mutations, but not all mutations are created equal. Some make tumors highly visible to the immune system, while others help cancers hide. In this study, researchers have discovered that across thousands of human cancers, there are five dominant patterns of protein-altering mutations — called amino acid substitution signatures — and these patterns help determine how tumors interact with the immune system. When DNA in a cell is damaged by environmental exposures (like tobacco smoke or UV light) or internal errors during replication and repair, the resulting mutations change the building ...

Rates of autism in girls and boys may be more equal than previously thought

2026-02-05
Autism has long been viewed as a condition that predominantly affects male individuals, but a study from Sweden published by The BMJ shows that autism may actually occur at comparable rates among male and female individuals.   The results show a clear female catch-up effect during adolescence, which the researchers say highlights the need to investigate why female individuals receive diagnoses later than male individuals.   The prevalence of autism spectrum disorder (ASD) has increased over the past three decades, with a high male-to-female diagnosis ratio of around 4:1.   The increase in prevalence is thought to ...

Testing menstrual blood for HPV could be “robust alternative” to cervical screening

2026-02-05
Testing menstrual blood for human papillomavirus (HPV) could be a “robust alternative or replacement” for current cervical cancer screening by a clinician, finds a study from China published by The BMJ today.   The researchers say using menstrual blood for HPV testing is convenient and non-invasive, allowing women to collect samples at home, and therefore could offer a practical pathway to expand access to screening.   Certain types of HPV infection can develop into cervical cancer and HPV testing is a key part of cervical screening. But not all women attend screening appointments for reasons including fear of pain, concerns about privacy and ...

Are returning Pumas putting Patagonian Penguins at risk? New study reveals the likelihood

2026-02-05
More images available via the link in the Notes Section Summary: Some Argentinian penguins are experiencing high levels of predation from pumas recolonising their historical territory. A new study has quantified the risk on long-term penguin population survival. Over four years, pumas at a national park on the Argentinian Patagonia coast are thought to have killed over 7,000 adult penguins (7.6% of the colony’s adult population) – but left many uneaten. Long-term, however, puma predation alone is unlikely to threaten colony viability, while low breeding success and reduced juvenile survival appear to be ...

Exposure to burn injuries played key role in shaping human evolution, study suggests

2026-02-05
IMPERIAL COLLEGE LONDON PRESS RELEASE Under embargo until 00:01 GMT Thursday 5 February Peer-reviewed / Observational study / People  Exposure to burn injuries played key role in shaping human evolution, study suggests  Humans’ exposure to high temperature burn injuries may have played an important role in our evolutionary development, shaping how our bodies heal, fight infection, and sometimes fail under extreme injury, according to new research.  For ...

Ancient American pronghorns were built for speed

2026-02-04
ANN ARBOR—The fastest land animal in North America is the American pronghorn, and previously, researchers thought it evolved its speed because of pressure from the now-extinct American cheetah. But recently, that theory has come under fire. Now, a University of Michigan study examining fossilized ankle bones of ancient relatives of the American pronghorn has shown that the pronghorn was evolving to be faster more than 5 million years before the American cheetah appeared on the continent. The study, ...

LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:

Kumamoto University Professor Kazuya Yamagata receives 2025 Erwin von Bälz Prize (Second Prize)

Sustainable electrosynthesis of ethylamine at an industrial scale

A mint idea becomes a game changer for medical devices

Innovation at a crossroads: Virginia Tech scientist calls for balance between research integrity and commercialization

Tropical peatlands are a major source of greenhouse gas emissions

From cytoplasm to nucleus: A new workflow to improve gene therapy odds

Three Illinois Tech engineering professors named IEEE fellows

Five mutational “fingerprints” could help predict how visible tumours are to the immune system

Rates of autism in girls and boys may be more equal than previously thought

Testing menstrual blood for HPV could be “robust alternative” to cervical screening

Are returning Pumas putting Patagonian Penguins at risk? New study reveals the likelihood

Exposure to burn injuries played key role in shaping human evolution, study suggests

Ancient American pronghorns were built for speed

Two-stage hydrothermal process turns wastewater sludge into cleaner biofuel

Soil pH shapes nitrogen competition between wheat and microbes, new study finds

Scientists develop algae-derived biochar nanoreactor to tackle persistent PFAS pollution

New research delves into strengthening radiology education during a time of workforce shortages and financial constraints

Mediterranean diet associated with lower risk of all stroke types

Personalized palliative care shows signs of improving quality of life for children with advanced cancer

Pediatric Investigation review highlights the future of newborn screening with next-generation sequencing

Molecular nature of ‘sleeping’ pain neurons becomes clearer

A clearer view for IVF: New "invisible" culture dishes improve embryo selection

Common bacteria discovered in the eye linked to cognitive decline

Neuroticism may be linked with more frequent sexual fantasies

The ideal scent detection dog is confident, persistent and resilient, without insecurities or neuroticism, according to a study featuring Dutch police dog handlers

Elusive beaked whales off the Louisiana coast may sometimes be diving right to the seafloor, finds new 3D acoustic technology which accurately pinpoints their locations using their echolocation clicks

The vulnerable Amazonian manatee is most often found where human activity is low, with a new eDNA-based method most commonly detecting the freshwater mammal in the remote western Amazon

Dog behavioral traits are linked with salivary hormone cortisol and neurotransmitter serotonin

Breakthrough in human norovirus research: Researchers overcome major obstacle to grow and study the virus

Call for papers: 10th anniversary special issue of Big Earth Data

[Press-News.org] A mint idea becomes a game changer for medical devices