Fiji Sun

Australian Researcher­s Use Silkworms To Repair Damaged Eardrums

- NDTV

Melbourne: Silkworms could have the potential to repair damaged eardrums, a team of Australian researcher­s has found.

The team of researcher­s, based in Melbourne and Perth, have developed a device that incorporat­ed silk into the “ClearDrum” ear implant, a device similar in appearance to a contact lens which a recipient’s cells can grow on, Xinhua news agency reported. Marcus Atlas, the leader of the research team, said that flexibilit­y made silk ideal for the device. “We felt that it had shown previously to support cell growth and proliferat­ion, and the ability to be able to change into various forms was a really appealing thing for us, particular­ly when we started to mix it with other products to create different mechanical and acoustic criteria,” Atlas told the media on Monday.

“The skin cells are there - it’s getting them to come across and heal, so it’s sort of a scaffold.” By removing sericin, the adhesive agent in silk, researcher­s were able to heat proteins into a liquid from which they created the device.

The device, for which clinical trials are being planned, is surgically placed under a damaged eardrum to provide a platform on which new tissue can grow.

For smaller perforatio­ns in the drum, the device dissolves over time after the hole is repaired but for larger-scale damage the device remains in place indefinite­ly. The Wellcome Trust, a charity based in Britain, has provided $2.9 million to fund a clinical trial of the device.

 ?? Photo: NDTV ?? Researcher­s have created a device that incorporat­ed silk into the “ClearDrum” ear implant.
Photo: NDTV Researcher­s have created a device that incorporat­ed silk into the “ClearDrum” ear implant.

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