Technology to bind skin to metal

A team of British scientists has overcome one of the great challenges of modern medicine by developing technology that allows skin to bind with metal without causing infection, improving the prospect of bionic limbs.

Early clinical trials on a group of patients who have lost limbs, fingers and thumbs, including two people injured in the July 7 bombings a year ago, are described as very promising. Doctors hope to involve more survivors of the London bombs, as well as military personnel and other volunteers who have suffered limb losses.

The technology, known as Intraosseous Transcutaneous Amputation Prosthesis (ITAP), could lead to the use of fully functioning bionic limbs, linked up to a person’s nervous system and controlled by the patient, within five years.

The technique involves a metal implant attached to bone that protrudes through the skin, which forms a seal around it. Prostheses can then be attached to the device. The breakthrough came after the team of scientists from University College London’s Centre for Biomedical Engineering observed how skin moulds around deers’ antlers.

The ability to attach a prosthetic limb directly to a patient’s skeleton, breaching the skin without infection, not only removes the discomfort of conventional prostheses, but it also reduces the substantial medical costs involved with replacement of sockets, repeated prosthetic fittings, treatment of infections and pressure sores and surgical procedures.

Norbert Kang, a plastic surgeon and the lead investigator in the first clinical trial, based at Mount Vernon Hospital, said that the technique had already been shown to have a significant impact on patients’ lives. One has been able to use a pen and write for the first time in ten years. Another, who lost an eye to cancer, has had a prosthetic eye attached using the technology.
Paul Unwin, managing director of Stanmore Implants Worldwide, a medical devices firm working in collaboration with UCL, described the work as highly successful, so far. “ITAP has the potential to play a key role in the next generation of bionic prostheses, working with artificially intelligent powered limbs, under the control of the patient’s own nervous system,” he said.
The incidence of limb and digit amputation in the developed world is about 390 per million people. In the European Union there are approximately 156,000 digits and limbs amputated annually, mainly as a result of disease.

Source - The Times

To contact one of our specialist lawyers please call 0800 61 66 81, or use the contact details at the top left of this page.

Next Steps

Call our specialist lawyers, regardless of
your situation on 0800 61 66 81.

Do you have a question?

If you have a question about the information on this page
please > click here

Additional Information

Others in a similar position reviewed the following pages:

Solicitors Regulation Authority The Law Society Backup Lexel
 
Ou most popular resourcesTo visit our most popular resources click here
Why choose our lawyers?
Amputation services
Amputation case studies
Amputation video case studies
Dogs for the disabled Limbless Association The Law Society SRA - Personal Injury Accredited Solicitors Regulation Authority Lexel - Law Society Back up Trust
Hovis firm fined for traumatic brain injury Hovis firm fined for traumatic brain injury
A firm has been fined after a worker suffered a traumatic brain injury and spinal injury while at work. Premier Foods, which...
Enzyme linked to stem cell behaviour Enzyme linked to stem cell behaviour
Spinal injury patients may see an advance in stem cell research after scientists discovered why certain stem cells do not...
Traumatic brain injury soldiers 'not receiving Purple Heart' Traumatic brain injury soldiers 'not receiving Purple Heart'
Soldiers serving with the US Army who suffer traumatic brain injury may not be receiving the medal and recognition they are...
Single gene 'may hold key to spinal cord injury' Single gene 'may hold key to spinal cord injury'
A single gene may hold the key to better treatment for people who have suffered a spinal cord injury, new research has found.Described...
Scientists stop cell death for spinal cord injury treatment Scientists stop cell death for spinal cord injury treatment
A new chemical to prevent stem cells from dying off has been found, scientists say.Stem cell-based treatments may be used...