With this new series of short publications MedDEV News wants to introduce various concepts of SMART IMPLANTS.
Smart Hips can reduce the number of surgical interventions post-op
MedDEV News (sciencedaily.com). To
monitor the real-time performance of bone implants is the challenge of
"Smart Hip," an innovative medical device that aims to reduce the
number of surgical interventions in the hip area and regenerate bone tissue by
using non-evasive methods. The device - developed by an engineering doctoral
student from the University of Porto in Portugal - has already been
successfully tested on animals.
It is estimated that today there
are about a million hip joint surgeries in Europe and USA, and that 5% to 10%
of these surgeries eventually generate further health problems, which usually
requires additional surgery. But a solution to this problem may now be closer.
Clara Frias -- a 29-year-old PhD
in Engineering Sciences from the Faculty of Engineering of University of Porto
(FEUP) and researcher at the Institute of Mechanical Engineering and Industrial
Management (INEGI) -- created this "intelligent" hip device to detect
an implant's eventual problems and to stimulate bone growth, thus improving the
quality of life for patients and reducing the risk of further surgery.
The Smart Hip is a network of
capsules, measuring sensors and actuators that are placed on the hip implant.
Once activated by the doctor -- through a computer connected to a Bluetooth
device -- the "Smart Hip" components send information that can help
prevent eventual problems after surgery.
In addition, says Clara Frias,
"a network of actuators capable of stimulating bone growth at the
implant's surface is being developed." This network, as well as the
network of sensors, will be externally controlled through a wireless system by
a physician. The concept has been validated in cell studies and was recently
tested in animals -- with "very encouraging results," adds the
researcher. Patented by the University of
Porto, the Smart Hip was developed in collaboration with researchers from the
INEGI, in partnership with the Universities of Aveiro, Évora and Trás-os-Montes
and Alto Douro.
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