New method may treat arterial disease
Washington, Nov 28 : A discovery that grew out of a collaboration between engineers and doctors shows promise in treating peripheral arterial disease (PAD), a common circulatory problem in which narrowed arteries reduce blood flow to the limbs.
The condition is considered a red flag for vascular disease, heart attack and stroke, and its progression can result in the loss of limbs or death.
Now, a team from the University of California-Los Angeles (UCLA) School of Engineering and Applied Science, working with researchers from its David Geffen School of Medicine, is working to develop a PAD treatment device that can prevent thrombosis in smaller blood vessels.
Their research centres on stents that incorporate a material known as Nitinol, a super-elastic nickel and titanium alloy that has the ability to be deformed and to recover its original shape upon heating.
"What we've been doing at UCLA for the last five to 10 years now is working with thin-film Nitinol," said Greg Carman, professor of mechanical and aerospace engineering and lead study investigator.
"Nitinol, discovered back in the 1960s, is a shape-memory material. They thought it was going to revolutionise the engineering field. It wasn't until 1985 that people began to think this material would probably be great to use in a stent," Carman said.
"The reason they liked it for a stent is because you could bend the material a very large distance and it would return to its original shape. Other metals, such as surgical steel, do not allow such a large shape recovery and, as such, cannot be used in many stenting devices."
In the early 2000s, Carman's group started looking into making thin-film Nitinol and accidentally stumbled across a way to fabricate what they believed was very high-quality, uniform-composition Nitinol.
"That's when we started producing thin-film Nitinol. We weren't sure where the applications for this novel, very low-profile material would go until we ran into someone in the medical school," Carman said.
"I immediately saw the promise that thin-film Nitinol had for intravascular and cardiac applications," said Daniel Levi, paediatric cardiologist and a principal investigator on the team. "Greg and I started working together immediately on stents and a heart valve."
While there are currently several treatments for PAD, including balloon angioplasty, stenting and bypass surgery, devices used in the last two can frequently cause thrombosis, in which clots form inside blood vessels, obstructing blood flow and leading to serious complications.
--IANS
Your Yearly Horoscope for 2010:
Pisces Aquarius Capricorn Sagittarius Scorpio Libra Virgo Leo Cancer Gemini Taurus Aries
TOP READ ARTICLES:
Acne: The Causes and Treatment for Acne
Dandruff: The Causes and Treatment for Dandruff
On coffee machines and why you
ought to invest in one
Decaf: the what, the why and the
how
Coffee, coffee houses and history
Coffee: the good, the bad and the
ugly
Coffee and smoking: what's the
connection?
Big names in the coffee business
The origins of your morning cuppa
5 ways to drink coffee creatively
Sonia keen on ensuring quota for Muslims: Rosaiah
Case against 10 policemen following custodial death of undertrial
UT builds new class-rooms in city govt schools
Indian Railway blacklists ad agency
Couple pushed out of train, husband dies, wife injured
Company executive kidnapped in Ghaziabad
Upset Malik to appeal against PCB's ban
I will not attend Assembly proceedings any more, rues MLA
UN chief in West Bank to push for peace talks
SC constitution bench to decide use of Article 136
Arab League invites India to attend March 27 Summit
Precious metals decline
Koirala was Nepal's tallest leader, Asia's elder statesman: PM
Nepal declares state mourning for Koirala
Maoists kidnap five officials in Jharkhand, release all
Waltz to direct his first movie
Protests in Orissa as Togadia barred from Kandhamal
PM concerned over unnatural deaths of tigers
PDP, NC members demand 'district jobs for locals only'
Pakistan Army chief leaves for talks in US
Robbie Williams pokes fun at Mark Owen on stage
How global warming can lead to increased violence in human beings
Pammie's boobs will help her win Dancing With Stars, feels her dance teacher
Severe sandstorm plagues Beijing
Brain imaging technique to get inside consumers' heads developed
British Airways strike leads to cancellation of thousands of tickets
Sandra Bullock can save marriage: Experts
Orang-utans can swim
Oz bid to create 'World's Longest Toilet Queue'
Brittany Murphy'used aliases to buy drugs'
Royals elect to bat against KKR
Except one, no one was fit during World Cup, claims Bajwa
Donald Trump tags Jesse James as 'cunning'
UID to open doors for poor: Nilekani
West Midlands man underwent sex change op to escape debt collectors!
DJ AM to be memorialised at Winter Music Conference
Lady Gaga hits back at producer's claim she ditched him
Trade unions must avoid militant and destructive agitations: Bhattacharya
Mini-laboratory to provide test-results in minutes
Centre issues code to prevent age fraud in sports