Defeat Diabetes: Ultrasonic Patch to Deliver Insulin
Ultrasonic Patch to Deliver Insulin
posted 11/06/02
A patch about
the size and weight of a matchbook that be worn on the body and with ultrasound
can deliver therapeutically effective doses of insulin, has been developed by
Penn State engineers.
Dr. Nadine
Barrie Smith, assistant professor of bioengineering, says, "The new Penn State
ultrasound patch, which operates in the same frequency range as the large
commercially available sonic drug delivery devices, is about an inch-and-a-half
by an inch-and-a-half in size and weighs less than an ounce. Commercially
available sonicators currently have a probe about eight inches long which weighs
over two pounds."
Experiments with human skin and with live rats have shown that the new
ultrasound patch delivers therapeutically effective doses of insulin.
The new prototype is described in detail in "Transducer Design for a Portable
Ultrasound Enhanced Transdermal Drug-Delivery System," published in the current
(October) issue of the IEEE Transactions on Ultrasonics, Ferroelectrics and
Frequency Control.
The key to the new ultrasound patch is a "cymbal" transducer developed by Dr.
Robert Newnham, the Alcoa professor emeritus of solid state science. The
transducer produces the sound waves that drive the medication through the skin
and into the blood stream. The cymbal transducer consists of a thin disk of
piezoelectric ceramic material sandwiched between titanium end caps shaped like
cymbals. Four of these transducers are used in the prototype.
A thin reservoir of insulin is placed in front of the cymbal transducer and when
a current is applied, sound waves just above the level of human hearing push the
medication through the skin and into the blood vessels.
Smith notes, "Our experiments with rats show that an exposure of 20 minutes
produced the same result as a 60-minute exposure. So, we are hopeful that,
eventually, we may be able to tune the system so that one to five minutes of
exposure may be enough."
Currently, diabetics must either inject insulin via hypodermic needles or use a
mini-pump with a catheter that remains implanted in their body. Ultrasound
offers a less painful and invasive alternative.
Her co-authors are Emiliano Maione, graduate student; Dr. K. Kirk Shung,
professor of bioengineering; Dr. Richard J. Meyer, research associate at Penn
State's Applied Research Laboratory (ARL); Dr. Jack W. Hughes, ARL Senior
scientist and professor of acoustics; Newnham; and Smith. The rat experiments
are described in "Ultrasound Mediated Transdermal in vivo Transport of Insulin
with Low Profile Cymbal Arrays," presented this month at the IEEE 2002
Ultrasonics Symposium in Munich, Germany. The authors are Seungjun Lee, graduate
student, Smith and Shung.
The research was supported, in part, with with laboratory start-up funds
provided to Smith by the University.
Source: Diabetes In Control Dot Com.
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