Stem-Cell Surgical Thread Coming Soon?

| Share
Johns Hopkins University
Image via Wikipedia

A team of John Hopkins University undergraduates say they have found a way to quickly and easily embed a person’s stem cells into surgical thread, a procedure they believe may help improve healing and prevent re-injury.
The 10 biomedical engineering students developed the procedure as part of a contest sponsored by a medical technology company trying to patent the concept as a way to help patients recover from major orthopedic injuries, such as ruptured ligaments and tendons.

“Using sutures that carry stems cells to the injury site would not change the way surgeons repair the injury,” student team leader Matt Rubashkin, who will be a senior in the fall, said in a university news release. “But we believe the stem cells will significantly speed up and improve the healing process. And because the stem cells will come from the patient, there should be no rejection problems.”

In concept, stem cells from bone marrow drawn from a patient’s hip would be quickly woven into surgical thread using the students’ machine. The stem cell thread would then be used, as in conventional surgery, to stitch the ruptured tendon or other injury. The stem cells should eventually evolve into tendon or cartilage that blends into their setting while releasing growth factor proteins that hasten healing and reduce inflammation along the way.

The students, with help from orthopedists and sponsor, Bioactive Surgical Inc. of Maryland, are testing the machine and procedure on animals. Early test results show the stem cells remaining intact and attached to the sutures.
“The students exceeded all expectations. They have probably cut at least a year off of the development time of this technology, and they are definitely advancing the science in this emerging area,” the inventor of the technology, Dr. Lew Schon, an assistant professor of orthopedic surgery in the Johns Hopkins School of Medicine,said in the news release.

According to the students’ research, about 46,000 people in the United States undergo Achilles tendon repair surgery every year. The procedure and post-surgical treatment cost about $40,000, and recovery takes up to a year.
The Baltimore students have also applied for grants to study how the embedded surgical thread could be used in other orthopedic surgeries or even cardiology and obstetrics.

from ajc

Reblog this post [with Zemanta]

Maybe you can find something interesting in the following sponsored links:

Incoming search terms:

recent study of surgical thread, STEM CELLS NEWS ORTHOPEDIC.

Share to Facebook Share to Twitter Stumble It Email This More...
Related pages on the web
  • Impingement Syndrome - Don't Suffer In Silence Shoulder injuries like Impingement Syndrome are unbelievably common.  Also known as throwers shoulder or swimmers shoulder it can be very painful and is no joking matter.  I know because  a few months ago I damaged by left shoulder.  It was...
  • Duchenne muscular dystrophy Introduction Duchenne muscular dystrophy or Pseudohypertrophic muscular dystrophy or Muscular dystrophy- Duchenne type is an X-linked neuromuscular disorder of muscle caused by an absence of the protein dystrophin. DMD was named in recognition of Dr. G. Duchenne de Boulogne from...
  • Paying For College In addition to help from my parents, I took out unsubsidized student loans and private loans to help cover the cost of tuition. I left college with about $25,000 in student loan debt, a little more than the average. In...
  • Benefits Of Gynexin Alpha Formula Gynecomastia will be the therapy entailed for reducing the enlarged breast tissue amongst men. This may sound bizarre to you, however the statistics show that around 1/3 of the male population on this planet entrench gynescomastia. Walking with an irregular...
  • Are You Setting Yourself Up For Injury? If you are serious about exercising, just getting started, or even thinking about going to the gym, there are a few things that you need to know before you take another step. Exercise related injuries send thousands to the doctor...
Blog Traffic Exchange Related articles on this site

0 Responses to “Stem-Cell Surgical Thread Coming Soon?”


  1. No Comments

Leave a Reply