The Asian Age

Magnetic surgical cement can heal spinal fractures

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Washington, July 29: Scientists have developed a magnetised surgical cement that can be used to heal spinal fractures, and deliver drugs to hardtoreac­h areas.

Patients with spinal fractures caused by tumours or osteoporos­is usually undergo a procedure called kyphoplast­y, where the fracture is filled with surgical cement.

While kyphoplast­y can stabilise the bone, cancer patients are still often left with spinal column tumours that are very hard to reach with convention­al chemothera­py, which has to cross the blood- brain barrier when delivered intravenou­sly.

Researcher­s at the University of Illinois at Chicago ( UIC) in the US found that by adding magnetic particles to surgical cement used to heal spinal fractures, they could guide magnetic nanopartic­les directly to lesions near the fractures.

Nanopartic­les bound to various drugs have been used to target drugs to specific locations or types of cells in the body.

Most commonly, this is achieved by binding a minute amount of drug to the nanopartic­le, which is designed to also bind to a specific type of cell, such as a cancer cell.

“By modifying the kyphoplast­y bone cement, we can both stabilise the spinal column and provide a targeted drug delivery system. This is a very promising technology as it has the potential to become a surgical option for patients with primary spinal column tumours,” said Steven Denyer, co- lead author of the study published in the journal PLOS ONE.

Using a pig model to study the magnetical­ly guided drug delivery system, scientists were successful­ly able to steer magnetic nanopartic­les to the magnetic cement in the animal’s spinal vertebrae.

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