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How did Auckland uni get the rights to this MIT creation...

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    How did Auckland uni get the rights to this MIT creation ,thought NAL had them.

    'Star Trek' device will take pain out of jab
    By Amelia Wade


    5:30 AM Friday Jun 1, 2012




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    NZ scientists help develop tiny jet that squirts medicine through patients' skin. Photo / Supplied

    Painful injections may become a thing of the past thanks to a high-pressure needle-less device that has been developed with New Zealand scientists.

    The invention has been compared to the one used in science fiction series Star Trek by the space ship's medical officer Leonard "Bones" McCoy, who could treat patients with a needle-less contraption.

    It forces a tiny, high-pressure jet of medicine through the skin at the speed of sound without the use of a hypodermic needle and can be programmed to deliver a range of doses to various depths.

    The project was led by Ian Hunter, a researcher at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT) in Boston.

    Originally from New Zealand, Dr Hunter is the George N. Hatsopoulos professor of mechanical engineering. He gained a PhD at the University of Auckland before moving to the United States. "The medicine comes out of the jet at the same diameter as a mosquito's proboscis, or the long tube attached to the insect's head.


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    "You don't feel when the mosquito inserts the proboscis into your skin because it's so very narrow. Our jet is of a similar diameter," Professor Hunter told MIT News.

    The jet is so narrow, in fact, that drugs can be injected through the eye into the retina and through the tympanic membrane into the middle and inner ear.

    "And we've also done something that we think is pretty cool: we can take a drug in powdered form [and] put it in this device.

    "The device, because of its very, very fast response, is able to vibrate that powder so it behaves like a liquid and then we inject it into tissue as though it was a liquid, even though it's a powder," Professor Hunter said.

    Dr Andrew Taberner from the University of Auckland's Bioengineering Institute was in charge of the New Zealand part of the project.

    He was one of the original team at MIT who started the research, which was how the Auckland institute came to be involved.

    The design is built around a mechanism called a Lorentz-force actuator - a small, powerful magnet surrounded by a coil of wire attached to a piston inside a drug ampoule (a small sealed vial).

    When current is applied, it interacts with the magnetic field to produce a force that pushes the piston forward, ejecting the drug at very high pressure and speed through the ampoule's nozzle. The researchers hope that among its other benefits, the technology will cut the number of doctors and nurses who accidently prick themselves with needles.

    Catherine Hogan, a member of the MIT research team, said it was hoped the device would help people with a phobia of needles as well as easing the discomfort of those who have to regularly inject themselves with drugs such as insulin.
 
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