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| Chemistry |
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Microdialysis Technique
Millions of medical devices, including catheters, pacemakers, vascular grafts, and glucose sensors, are regularly implanted into humans. Despite the frequency of these procedures, implantation still poses a risk of serious side effects, including implant site infection and rejection of the implanted device. Julie Stenken, associate professor of analytical chemistry, has received a four-year, $750,000 grant from the National Institute of Biomedical Imaging and Bioengineering (NIBIB) to develop a new technique to study the bodys reaction to implants at the cellular level. The microdialysis technique can provide information that may someday help doctors spot infection earlier and prevent rejection from occurring. Stenken is collaborating with researchers at the Albany Medical Center. A microdialysis probe (the size of a 0.5 mm pencil lead) is used to withdraw a tiny sample of extracellular fluid at the site where the implant and the bodys tissues meet. Analysis of the sample can detect the presence and amount of a variety of chemical markers called cytokines that may indicate early signs of responses to an implant such as infection or rejection. If you can understand the chemical communication that is going on at the implantation site, you can ultimately bioengineer the site to make it do what is appropriate for the device, says Stenken. The tools to measure these chemical reactions are just starting to become available to us. The NIBIB coordinates with the biomedical imaging and bioengineering programs of other agencies and the National Institutes of Health to support imaging and engineering research with potential medical applications. Stenkens microdialysis project is part of Rensselaers focal effort to advance biotechnology discoveries for the benefit of public health, the environment, homeland security, bioterrorism, and for positive economic development locally and globally. |
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