Physics World 10月24日 17:09
新型螺旋形导管优化脑部药物输送
index_new5.html
../../../zaker_core/zaker_tpl_static/wap/tpl_guoji1.html

 

阿联酋研究人员设计了一种新型导管,能够向大脑的整个区域输送药物。由纽约大学阿布扎比分校的Batoul Khlaifat及其同事开发的这种导管具有螺旋结构和多个出口,有望在治疗多种神经系统疾病方面更安全有效。该设计通过在导管长度上设置多个出口并调整每个出口的直径,实现了更均匀的药物输送。此外,螺旋形设计有助于扩大药物在目标区域的分布面积,并减少插入时的弯曲风险,初步实验验证了其安全性和均匀输送药物的能力,未来有望为脑部疾病的精准治疗带来革新。

🧠 新型螺旋形导管设计:由阿联酋研究人员 Batoul Khlaifat 及其团队开发,导管采用螺旋结构,旨在更安全有效地向大脑特定区域输送药物,用于治疗帕金森病、癫痫和肿瘤等神经系统疾病。

🧪 多孔均匀输送技术:通过在导管长度方向设置多个药物出口,并精确调整每个出口的直径,该设计能够克服传统导管药物分布不均的问题,确保药物均匀地输送到目标脑区。

📐 螺旋结构优势:与传统直型导管相比,螺旋形设计能够扩大药物在目标植入区域的分布面积,同时增强导管插入时的抗弯曲能力,降低手术创伤。

🔬 初步实验验证:在实验室控制条件下进行的流体动力学模拟和初步实验验证了螺旋形导管的均匀药物输送能力。在小鼠模型中的测试也表明,该设计与传统直型导管相比,神经炎症反应没有显著差异,验证了其安全性。

🎯 未来应用前景:研究人员认为,这种新型螺旋形导管(SPIRAL)有望通过单次颅骨插入,针对患者个体进行优化,实现更精准的脑部药物输送,从而改善癫痫和胶质母细胞瘤等脑部疾病的治疗效果。

Researchers in the United Arab Emirates have designed a new catheter that can deliver drugs to entire regions of the brain. Developed by Batoul Khlaifat and colleagues at New York University Abu Dhabi, the catheter’s helical structure and multiple outflow ports could make it both safer and more effective for treating a wide range of neurological disorders.

Modern treatments for brain-related conditions including Parkinson’s disease, epilepsy, and tumours often involve implanting microfluidic catheters that deliver controlled doses of drug-infused fluids to highly localized regions of the brain. Today, these implants are made from highly flexible materials that closely mimic the soft tissue of the brain. This makes them far less invasive than previous designs.

However, there is still much room for improvement, as Khlaifat explains. “Catheter design and function have long been limited by the neuroinflammatory response after implantation, as well as the unequal drug distribution across the catheter’s outlets,” she says.

A key challenge with this approach is that each of the brain’s distinct regions has highly irregular shapes, which makes it incredibly difficult to target via single drug doses. Instead, doses must be delivered either through repeated insertions from a single port at the end of a catheter, or through single insertions across multiple co-implanted catheters. Either way, the approach is highly invasive, and runs the risk of further trauma to the brain.

Multiple ports

In their study, Khlaifat’s team explored how many of these problems stem from existing catheter designs. They tend to be simple tubes with single input and output ports at either end. Using fluid dynamics simulations, they started by investigating how drug outflow would change when multiple output ports are positioned along the length of the catheter.

To ensure this outflow is delivered evenly, they carefully adjusted the diameter of each port to account for the change in fluid pressure along the catheter’s length – so that four evenly spaced ports could each deliver roughly one quarter of the total flow. Building on this innovation, the researchers then explored how the shape of the catheter itself could be adjusted to optimize delivery even further.

“We varied the catheter design from a straight catheter to a helix of the same small diameter, allowing for a larger area of drug distribution in the target implantation region with minimal invasiveness,” explains team member Khalil Ramadi. “This helical shape also allows us to resist buckling on insertion, which is a major problem for miniaturized straight catheters.”

Helical catheter

Based on their simulations, the team fabricated a helical catheter the call Strategic Precision Infusion for Regional Administration of Liquid, or SPIRAL. In their first set of experiments, they tested their simulations in controlled lab conditions. They verified their prediction of even outflow rates across the catheter’s outlets.

“Our helical device was also tested in mouse models alongside its straight counterpart to study its neuroinflammatory response,” Khlaifat says. “There were no significant differences between the two designs.”

Having validated the safety of their approach, the researchers are now hopeful that SPIRAL could pave the way for new and improved methods for targeted drug delivery within the brain. With the ability to target entire regions of the brain with smaller, more controlled doses, this future generation of implanted catheters could ultimately prove to be both safer and more effective than existing designs.

“These catheters could be optimized for each patient through our computational framework to ensure only regions that require dosing are exposed to therapy, all through a single insertion point in the skull,” describes team member Mahmoud Elbeh. “This tailored approach could improve therapies for brain disorders such as epilepsy and glioblastomas.”

The research is described in the Journal of Neural Engineering.

The post Spiral catheter optimizes drug delivery to the brain appeared first on Physics World.

Fish AI Reader

Fish AI Reader

AI辅助创作,多种专业模板,深度分析,高质量内容生成。从观点提取到深度思考,FishAI为您提供全方位的创作支持。新版本引入自定义参数,让您的创作更加个性化和精准。

FishAI

FishAI

鱼阅,AI 时代的下一个智能信息助手,助你摆脱信息焦虑

联系邮箱 441953276@qq.com

相关标签

螺旋形导管 脑部药物输送 神经系统疾病 精准医疗 Helical Catheter
相关文章