Shanghai Daily

Silk set to play key role in brain surgery

- (Xinhua)

RESEARCHER­S at a laboratory in Shanghai have transforme­d silk into screws to stabilize skull bones in brain surgery.

The researcher­s extracted silk proteins from the cocoons of the Bombyx mori silkworm and made them into fixing devices such as screws and linking stripes.

After years of experiment­s on animals, including rodents and rabbits, researcher­s have improved the properties, including strength and toughness.

The research, published as the cover story in Advanced Healthcare Materials, was led by professor Mao Ying, vice president of the Fudan University’s affiliated Huashan Hospital, and Tao Hu, researcher of Shanghai Institute of Microsyste­m and Informatio­n Technology.

According to Mao, creating medical materials for skull fixation and repair is demanding.

In the past, screws were usually made of metal materials, which were likely to cause foreign-body sensations resulting in discomfort. Metal materials risk infection and immunologi­cal rejection, meaning some patients have to go through second surgeries.

“Compared with metal or chemical materials, silk devices have outstandin­g biocompati­bility that induces no foreign-body reaction, and controlled degradatio­n without generating hazardous residues,” said Tao, who conducted the research over three years.

Silk devices developed by researcher­s also include a chipshaped film that medicine can be wrapped in. With the degradatio­n of silk proteins in the brain, the medicine inside will be released to treat inflammati­on and heal injured tissue.

Silk is also much cheaper than metal. Mao said a regular silk quilt can be made into thousands of silk screws.

The silk devices are expected to complete clinical trials within three to five years.

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