Inspired by wounded warriors, new paint-on, see-through bandage not only protects wounds and severe burns but enables direct measurement of tissue oxygenation
WASHINGTON, Oct. 1, 2014âInspired by a desire to help wounded soldiers, an international, multidisciplinary team of researchers led by Assistant Professor Conor L. Evans at the Wellman Center for Photomedicine of Massachusetts General Hospital (MGH) and Harvard Medical School (HMS) has created a paint-on, see-through, âsmartâ bandage that glows to indicate a woundâs tissue oxygenation concentration. Because oxygen plays a critical role in healing, mapping these levels in severe wounds and burns can help to significantly improve the success of surgeries to restore limbs and physical functions. The work was published today in The Optical Societyâs (OSA) open-access journal Biomedical Optics Express.
âInformation about tissue oxygenation is clinically relevant but is often inaccessible due to a lack of accurate or noninvasive measurements,â explained lead author Zongxi Li, an HMS research fellow on Evans’ team.
Now, the âsmartâ bandage developed by the team provides direct, noninvasive measurement of tissue oxygenation by combining three simple, compact and inexpensive components: a bright sensor molecule with a long phosphorescence lifetime and appropriate dynamic range; a bandage material compatible with the sensor molecule that conforms to the skinâs surface to form an airtight seal; and an imaging device capable of capturing the oxygen-dependent signals from the bandage with high signal-to-noise ratio.
This work is part of the teamâs long-term program âto develop a Sensing, Monitoring And Release of Therapeutics (SMART) bandage for improved care of patients with acute or chronic wounds,â says Evans, senior author on the Biomedical Optics Express paper.
How exactly does a âsmartâ bandage work?
For starters, the bandageâs not-so-secret key ingredient is phosphorsâmolecules that absorb light and then emit it via a process known as phosphorescence.
Phosphorescence is encountered by many on a daily basisâranging from glow-in-the-dark dials on watches to t-shirt lettering. âHow brightly our phosphorescent molecules emit light depends on how much oxygen is present,â said Li. âAs the concentration of oxygen is reduced, the phosphors glow both longer and more brightly.â To make the bandage simple to interpret, the team also incorporated a green oxygen-insensitive reference dye, so that changes in tissue oxygenation are displayed as a green-to-red colormap.
The bandage is applied by âpaintingâ it onto the skinâs surface as a viscous liquid, which dries to a solid thin film within a minute. Once the first layer has dried, a transparent barrier layer is then applied atop it to protect the film and slow the rate of oxygen exchange between the bandage and room airâmaking the bandage sensitive to the oxygen within tissue.
The final piece involves a camera-based readout device, which performs two functions: it provides a burst of excitation light that triggers the emission of the phosphors inside the bandage, and then it records the phosphorsâ emission. âDepending on the cameraâs configuration, we can measure either the brightness or color of the emitted light across the bandage or the change in brightness over time,â Li said. âBoth of these signals can be used to create an oxygenation map.â The emitted light from the bandage is bright enough that it can be acquired using a regular camera or smartphoneâopening the possibility to a portable, field-ready device.
Immediate applications and future goals
Immediate applications for the oxygen-sensing bandage include monitoring patients with a risk of developing ischemic (restricted blood supply) conditions, postoperative monitoring of skin grafts or flaps, and burn-depth determination as a guide for surgical debridementâthe removal of dead or damaged tissue from the body.
âThe need for a reliable, accurate and easy-to-use method of rapid assessment of blood flow to the skin for patients remains a clinical necessity,â said co-author Samuel Lin, an HMS associate professor of surgery at Beth Israel Deaconess Medical Center. âPlastic surgeons continuously monitor the state of blood flow to the skin, so the liquid-bandage oxygenation sensor is an exciting step toward improving patient care within the realm of vascular blood flow examination of the skin.â
Whatâs the next step for the bandage? âWeâre developing brighter sensor molecules to improve the bandageâs oxygen sensing efficiency,â said Emmanuel Roussakis, another research fellow in Evansâ laboratory and co-author, who is leading the sensor development effort. The teamâs laboratory research will also focus on expanding the sensing capability of the bandage to other treatment-related parametersâsuch as pH, bacterial load, oxidative states and specific disease markersâand incorporating an on-demand drug release capacity.
âIn the future, our goal for the bandage is to incorporate therapeutic release capabilities that allow for on-demand drug administration at a desired location,â says Evans. âIt allows for the visual assessment of the wound bed, so treatment-related wound parameters are readily accessible without the need for bandage removalâpreventing unnecessary wound disruption and reducing the chance for bacterial infection.â
Beyond the lab, the teamâs aim is to move this technology from the bench to the bedside, so they are actively searching for industry partners. They acknowledge research support from the Military Medical Photonics Program from the U.S. Department of Defense, and National Institutes of Health.
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Harvard âSmartâ Bandage Emits Phosphorescent Glow for Healing Below
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