In
one episode of the TV show “Star Trek: The Next Generation,” Captain
Jean-Luc Picard is stabbed in the chest but survives thanks to a device
that stitches up wounds in his heart. Now, real researchers have
invented an adhesive that can also repair heart wounds.
The glue bonds to heart tissue,
and is as strong as stitches or staples, sealing wounds while avoiding
complications, say its inventors, Jeffrey M. Karp, an associate
professor of medicine at Harvard
Medical School, and Dr. Pedro del Nido, a cardiac surgeon at Boston Children’s Hospital.
Staples
and sutures (stitches) can cause problems. “With each pass of a suture
needle, you have to realign the tissue,” Karp said. “Staples can damage
tissue, and they need to be bent to lock into place.” In addition,
staples don’t provide a watertight seal, and are often metal, so they
have to be removed, he said.
To
solve these problems, the researchers aimed to design a water-repellent
polymer glue that could harden quickly and create a seal that could
withstand the stress in a beating heart or a blood vessel, according to
the paper published today (Jan. 8) in the journal Science Translational Medicine. [Top 10 Amazing Facts About Your Heart]
The
glue starts off with the viscosity of honey. A doctor can paint it onto a
patch, and use the patch on the heart to repair a hole in tissue
(similar to what one might do on a bicycle tire). Or, a doctor could
apply the glue directly to a tear in a blood vessel or intestinal wall,
and clamp the edges of the torn tissue together until the glue hardens.
Once
it is in place, the glue molecules work their way between the collagen
fibers in the tissue. (Collagen is the protein that gives tissue its
structure and shape.) The surgeon then shines ultraviolet light on the
glue, causing the glue molecules to release free radicals, which are
highly reactive and bind molecules in the glue called acrylate groups to
one another, creating strong chains. The result is a substance that
resembles rubber, with molecules that are intertwined with the heart’s
own collagen.
So
far, the team has tested the glue on pigs and rats. In pigs, the
researchers inserted a patch into a living heart, and attached it to the
septum, which separates the left and right atria, the two upper
chambers of the heart.
They also repaired a carotid artery (which brings blood to the heart muscle) by cutting an incision in the artery and then applying the glue to the wound.
In rats, the researchers cut tiny holes in the animals’ hearts, similar to what certain birth defects might cause, and then patched them with a piece of material that allowed the tissue to regrow and seal the hole.
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