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SINTEF
research scientists at the Micro and Nanotechnology
Laboratory in Oslo have developed a flow metre with
fluid channels thinner than a strand of hair. The
new device controls that patients receive the correct
dosage of medicine.
The new invention is a micro-technological control
instrument that can measure medicine flows. The active
components in the sensor are only a few thousandths
of a millimetre thick and the tiny device can measure
liquid amounts of less than one-millionth of a litre.
The invention means much safer
dosing for patients reliant on a continual supply
of medicine from medicine pumps, such as patients
with cerebral palsy. When the medicine pumps are surgically
inserted under the skin, small volumes of muscle relaxant
medication can continually be released by the spinal
cord to control spasms. Cancer patients can use a
portable morphine pump for pain relief, while diabetic
patients can have the pleasure of a medicine pump
for round-the-clock insulin dosing.
The tiny invention has already
generated considerable attention with senior scientist
Liv Furuberg fielding business enquiries from three
international medical equipment producers.
Contact: liv.furuberg@sintef.no
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