Close X
Saturday, November 16, 2024
ADVT 
India

3D-printed technology to make drug delivery better

Darpan News Desk IANS, 22 Aug, 2014 11:31 AM
    The US researchers have developed an innovative method for using affordable, consumer-grade 3D printers and materials to fabricate custom medical implants that can contain antibacterial and chemotherapeutic compounds for targeted drug delivery.
     
    The team has created filament extruders that can make medical-quality 3D printing filaments that have specialised properties for drug delivery.
     
    Creating these filaments is a new concept that can result in smart drug delivering medical implants or catheters.
     
    “After identifying the usefulness of the 3D printers, we realised there was an opportunity for rapid prototyping using this fabrication method,” said Jeffery Weisman, a doctoral student from Louisiana Tech University's biomedical engineering programme.
     
    Through the addition of nanoparticles and/or other additives, this technology becomes much more viable using a common 3D printing material that is already biocompatible, he added.
     
    The new method of creating medically compatible 3D-printing filaments will offer hospital pharmacists and physicians a novel way to deliver drugs and treat illness.
     
    Most of today's antibiotic implants or “beads” are made out of bone cements which have to be hand-mixed by a surgeon during a surgical procedure and contain toxic carcinogenic substances.
     
    Weisman and his team's custom 3D print filaments can be made of bioplastics which can be resorbed by the body to avoid the need for additional surgery.
     
    The new technique enables dispersion on a tabletop scale, allowing researchers to easily customise additives to the desired levels.
     
    One of the greatest benefits of this technology is that it can be done using any consumer printer and can be used anywhere in the world, Weisman concluded.

    MORE India ARTICLES

    Manmohan Singh: He ended with where he began

    Manmohan Singh: He ended with where he began
    Having travelled far and wide during his two terms as prime minister and having earned more praise as an economist-statesman overseas than within his country, the forum that marked his entry to the high table of global geopolitics should have an added significance.

    Manmohan Singh: He ended with where he began

    Punjab's Rs 65,000-crore investment: Is it for real?

    Punjab's Rs 65,000-crore investment: Is it for real?
    In the last three months, Sukhbir Singh Badal has been preening over the success of last December's "Progressive Punjab Investors' Summit", claiming that the creme-de-la-creme of Indian industry had promised to invest nearly Rs.67,000-crore (Rs.670 billion/$11 billion) in the state.

    Punjab's Rs 65,000-crore investment: Is it for real?

    Police arrest 14 AAP members, AAP alleges bias

    Police arrest 14 AAP members, AAP alleges bias
    Police have arrested 14 AAP members on charges of rioting outside the BJP office here and said Thursday they were looking two key AAP leaders. The AAP accused the police of bias.

    Police arrest 14 AAP members, AAP alleges bias

    'Indian EVMs the envy of many countries'

    'Indian EVMs the envy of many countries'
    Our EVMs have been described glowingly, interestingly enough also by many high courts in judgments while examining petitions in the years gone by. It is, as I have often stated, an efficient and tamper-proof machine

    'Indian EVMs the envy of many countries'

    AAP, BJP supporters clash on Delhi, Lucknow streets

    AAP, BJP supporters clash on Delhi, Lucknow streets
    Protests by AAP workers outside the BJP offices in the national and Uttar Pradesh capitals against party chief Arvind Kejriwal's detention in Gujarat snowballed into a pitched battle between members of both parties.

    AAP, BJP supporters clash on Delhi, Lucknow streets

    India goes to poll in 9 phases from April 7 to May 12, Results on May 16

    India goes to poll in 9 phases from April 7 to May 12, Results on May 16
    India will elect a new parliament over nine days in April-May in the world's largest democratic exercise, with the Election Commission Wednesday saying the results will be declared May 16.

    India goes to poll in 9 phases from April 7 to May 12, Results on May 16