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Ultrasound-activated structures clear biofilms from medical implants
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瑞士伯尔尼大学和苏黎世联邦理工学院的研究人员开发了一种新技术,通过将超声激活的移动结构整合到“芯片支架”原型设备中,无需取出植入设备即可清除生物膜。这项技术利用微观毛发状结构(纤毛)在声场作用下运动产生强烈的流体流动,从而清除导管、支架等植入物表面的生物膜和结垢沉积物。与传统方法相比,该技术有望延长植入物的安全使用寿命,减少更换手术,降低患者不适和风险,并具有更广泛的应用前景。

🔬该技术利用声场激活的微观纤毛运动,产生高达10 mm/s的强烈流体流动,有效破坏和冲刷掉植入物内外部表面的生物膜和钙化沉积物。

💡与现有支架和导管需要定期更换以避免堵塞和感染相比,这项技术是一项重大进步,且优于以往的机械清除方法,它通过聚合纤毛放大超声效果,使用的频率(20-100 kHz)低于以往的微谐振器设备(MHz范围),从而在实现治疗效果的同时,优先考虑患者安全并最大限度地减少组织损伤风险。

🩺该技术不仅限于泌尿科,还可应用于内脏外科和兽医学等领域,在这些领域中,保持植入医疗设备的清洁至关重要。未来,研究人员计划测试新的涂层,以减少体内的接触反应(如炎症),并探索提高设备对超声响应的方法,例如沉积薄金属层。

When implanted medical devices like urinary stents and catheters get clogged with biofilms, the usual solution is to take them out and replace them with new ones. Now, however, researchers at the University of Bern and ETH Zurich, Switzerland have developed an alternative. By incorporating ultrasound-activated moving structures into their prototype “stent-on-a-chip” device, they showed it is possible to remove biofilms without removing the device itself. If translated into clinical practice, the technology could increase the safe lifespan of implants, saving money and avoiding operations that are uncomfortable and sometimes hazardous for patients.

Biofilms are communities of bacterial cells that adhere to natural surfaces in the body as well as artificial structures such as catheters, stents and other implants. Because they are encapsulated by a protective, self-produced extracellular matrix made from polymeric substances, they are mechanically robust and resistant to standard antibacterial measures. If not removed, they can cause infections, obstructions and other complications.

Intense, steady flows push away impurities

The new technology, which was co-developed by Cornel Dillinger, Pedro Amado and other members of Francesco Clavica and Daniel Ahmed’s research teams, takes advantage of recent advances in the fields of robotics and microfluidics. Its main feature is a coating made from microscopic hair-like structures known as cilia. Under the influence of an acoustic field, which is applied externally via a piezoelectric transducer, these cilia begin to move. This movement produces intense, steady fluid flows with velocities of up to 10 mm/s – enough to break apart encrusted deposits (made from calcium carbonate, for example) and flush away biofilms from the inner and outer surfaces of implanted urological devices.

“This is a major advance compared to existing stents and catheters, which require regular replacements to avoid obstruction and infections,” Clavica says.

The technology is also an improvement on previous efforts to clear implants by mechanical means, Ahmed adds. “Our polymeric cilia in fact amplify the effects of ultrasound by allowing for an effect known as acoustic streaming at frequencies of 20 to 100 kHz,” he explains. “This frequency is lower than that possible with previous microresonator devices developed to work in a similar way that had to operate in the MHz-frequency range.”

The lower frequency achieves the desired therapeutic effects while prioritizing patient safety and minimizing the risk of tissue damage, he adds.

Wider applications

In creating their technology, the researchers were inspired by biological cilia, which are a natural feature of physiological systems such as the reproductive and respiratory tracts and the central nervous system. Future versions, they say, could apply the ultrasound probe directly to a patient’s skin, much as handheld probes of ultrasound scanners are currently used for imaging. “This technology has potential applications beyond urology, including fields like visceral surgery and veterinary medicine, where keeping implanted medical devices clean is also essential,” Clavica says.

The researchers now plan to test new coatings that would reduce contact reactions (such as inflammation) in the body. They will also explore ways of improving the device’s responsiveness to ultrasound – for example by depositing thin metal layers. “These modifications could not only improve acoustic streaming performance but could also provide additional antibacterial benefits,” Clavica tells Physics World.

In the longer term, the team hope to translate their technology into clinical applications. Initial tests that used a custom-built ultrasonic probe coupled to artificial tissue have already demonstrated promising results in generating cilia-induced acoustic streaming, Clavica notes. “In vivo animal studies will then be critical to validate safety and efficacy prior to clinical adoption,” he says.

The present study is detailed in PNAS.

The post Ultrasound-activated structures clear biofilms from medical implants appeared first on Physics World.

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生物膜 医疗植入物 超声技术 微流控
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