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Nanoparticle Gel Heals Injured Brain And Bone

Posted: Mon Sep 14, 2009 9:34 pm
by Tsukiyumi
Scrambled brains and broken bones can both be healed with a new nanoparticle-infused hydrogel.

Developed by scientists from Clemson University, the gel creates new blood vessels and later encourages the body's own stem cells to replace dead bone or brain cells.

Twelve weeks after a devastating brain injury some test rats had recovered almost all of their original muscle and sensory functions.

"The goal of this project is to encourage the neurological regeneration of damaged tissue," said Ning Zhang, a Clemson University scientist developing the hydrogel. "The functions controlled by the damaged regions will be lost permanently if not restored."

Zhang used a controlled cortical impactor, basically a small, pneumatic spear with a conch-shaped tip, to strike the rat's forehead, destroying most of the brain's cortex and some of the striatum. These are areas responsible for memory, learning, sensory information and muscle movements, among other functions.

For a human, that amount of brain damage would be roughly equivalent to being in a bad car crash.

Fluid quickly filled area around the head wound. The Clemson scientists drained the fluid and replaced it with a liquid cocktail of three different neural growth factors, each one encased in a different biodegradable nanoparticle.

Zhang wouldn't comment on the exact makeup of the nanoparticles, other than to say they can be produced from natural or synthetic materials, and they can be tuned to diograde depending on the needs of the scientists.

The body's temperature turns the liquid into a gelatin scaffold, spurring the creation of new blood vessels to feed the recovering organ.

Over the next three to four weeks the nanoparticles broke apart, releasing their contents.

The first growth factors find neural stem cells and prep them for travel. The second growth factor helps the stem cells travel to the injury site. The third and final growth factor turns the stem cells into new neurons and glial cells.

Twelve weeks after the injury the rats had regained almost all their original sensory and motor functions. Memory and learning also improved significantly when compared with traumatized but untreated rats.

A modified version of the hydrogel can heal devastating wounds to bone and cartilage as well.

Using rabbits instead of mice, Zhang and her colleagues removed three centimeters, or almost half, of a rabbit's femur bone. They then injected hydrogel, modified with drugs to encourage bone growth instead of brain growth, into the wound.

"Normally the bone would never heal" from that wound that severe," said Zhang.

"But in our studies the bone healed in a couple of weeks."

Whether it's mushy brains, broken bones or torn cartilidge, the nanoparticle-infused gel will only heal animal wounds for now. Five years of additional animal testing will be required before any human trials can begin, says Zhang.

If animal trials go well, and if human clinical trials go well, then the hydrogel could be used to treat humans with brain, bone, or other tissue damage.
Source

This is pretty darn awesome.

Re: Nanoparticle Gel Heals Injured Brain And Bone

Posted: Mon Sep 14, 2009 9:37 pm
by Lazar
Damn! This is why science rocks.

Re: Nanoparticle Gel Heals Injured Brain And Bone

Posted: Mon Sep 14, 2009 9:38 pm
by Lighthawk
Shit, we're on our way to having bacta. That's awesome.

Re: Nanoparticle Gel Heals Injured Brain And Bone

Posted: Mon Sep 14, 2009 9:39 pm
by Sionnach Glic
This is why science is fucking awesome.

Re: Nanoparticle Gel Heals Injured Brain And Bone

Posted: Mon Sep 14, 2009 9:48 pm
by Nickswitz
Haha, when I saw this I instantly thought, "nanoprobes, I know it... lol"

Close, lol, and yeah, this is an amazing breakthrough...

Re: Nanoparticle Gel Heals Injured Brain And Bone

Posted: Mon Sep 14, 2009 10:13 pm
by Tsukiyumi
I'm digging this especially; this stuff could potentially repair the damage to the cartilage in my knees. I'd still need to get the ligaments replaced, but fixing the cartilage would help tremendously.

Re: Nanoparticle Gel Heals Injured Brain And Bone

Posted: Mon Sep 14, 2009 10:32 pm
by Mikey
Wow. Just... wow. Incredible. I wonder if it works on beta cells?

On an unrelated note, did anyone else think the phrase "conch-shaped tip" was an extraordinarily odd descriptor?

Re: Nanoparticle Gel Heals Injured Brain And Bone

Posted: Wed Sep 16, 2009 10:38 pm
by RK_Striker_JK_5
For science!

And yes, this stuff reads as pure awesome. Not from concentrate. ;)

Re: Nanoparticle Gel Heals Injured Brain And Bone

Posted: Wed Sep 16, 2009 10:45 pm
by Nickswitz
What's even better is that it seems that it doesn't require organic material at all... meaning that the government will probably not go against it like they did stem cell research. As well as that, hopefully it's easily replicatable. Then we would have an almost endless supply... :lol: