Cutting Back on Melanoma Biopsies
With the most deadly form of skin cancer, melanoma, a huge number of
dangerous-looking moles are actually harmless, but has always been
impossible to know for sure without an invasive surgical biopsy. Today
dermatologists have new help in making the right call — a handheld tool
approved by the FDA for multispectral analysis of tissue morphology. The
MelaFind optical scanner is not for definitive diagnosis but rather to
provide additional information a doctor can use in determining whether
or not to order a biopsy. The goal is to reduce the number of patients
left with unnecessary biopsy scars, with the added benefit of
eliminating the cost of unnecessary procedures. The
MelaFind
technology (MELA Sciences, Irvington, NY) uses missile navigation
technologies originally paid for the Department of Defense to optically
scan the surface of a suspicious lesion at 10 electromagnetic
wavelengths. The collected signals are processed using heavy-duty
algorithms and matched against a registry of 10,000 digital images of
melanoma and skin disease.
Electronic Aspirin
For people who suffer from migraines, cluster headaches, and other
causes of chronic, excruciating head or facial pain, the "take two
aspirins and call me in the morning" method is useless. Doctors have
long associated the most severe, chronic forms of headache with the
sphenopalatine ganglion (SPG), a facial nerve bundle, but haven't yet
found a treatment that works on the SPG long-term. A technology under
clinical investigation at
Autonomic Technologies, Inc.,
(Redwood City, CA) is a patient-powered tool for blocking SPG signals
at the first sign of a headache. The system involves the permanent
implant of a small nerve stimulating device in the upper gum on the side
of the head normally affected by headache. The lead tip of the implant
connects with the SPG bundle, and when a patient senses the onset of a
headache, he or she places a handheld remote controller on the cheek
nearest the implant. The resulting signals stimulate the SPG nerves and
block the pain-causing neurotransmitters.
Needle-Free Diabetes Care
Diabetes self-care is a pain—literally. It brings the constant need to
draw blood for glucose testing, the need for daily insulin shots and the
heightened risk of infection from all that poking. Continuous glucose
monitors and insulin pumps are today's best options for automating most
of the complicated daily process of blood sugar management – but they
don't completely remove the need for skin pricks and shots. But there's
new skin in this game.
Echo Therapeutics
(Philadelphia, PA) is developing technologies that would replace the
poke with a patch. The company is working on a transdermal biosensor
that reads blood analytes through the skin without drawing blood. The
technology involves a handheld electric-toothbrush-like device that
removes just enough top-layer skin cells to put the patient's blood
chemistry within signal range of a patch-borne biosensor. The sensor
collects one reading per minute and sends the data wirelessly to a
remote monitor, triggering audible alarms when levels go out of the
patient's optimal range and tracking glucose levels over time.
A Valve Job with Heart
The Sapien transcatheter aortic valve is a life-saving alternative to
open-heart surgery for patients who need new a new valve but can't
endure the rigors of the operation. Manufactured by
Edwards Life Sciences (Irvine, CA), the
Sapien
has been available in Europe for some time but is only now finding its
first use in U.S. heart centers—where it is limited only to the frailest
patients thus far. The Sapien valve is guided through the femoral
artery by catheter from a small incision near the grown or rib cage. The
valve material is made of bovine tissue attached to a stainless-steel
stent, which is expanded by inflating a small balloon when correctly
placed in the valve space. A simpler procedure that promises
dramatically shorter hospitalizations is bound to have a positive effect
on the cost of care.
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