New Surgical Tape Works Like A Parasitic Worm

Tuesday, April 16, 2013 - 14:30 in Physics & Chemistry

Spiny Proboscis An artist's rendition of Pomphorhynchus laevis, a parasitic worm Image courtesy of Karp labThe bandage is inspired by the spiny proboscis of the intestine-infecting Pomphorhynchus laevis. Scientists have built a better bandage that'll stick to you like a leech. Literally. The new prototype adhesive bandage sticks even to wet skin, using a technique inspired by a parasitic worm that attaches itself to the insides of its hosts' intestines. Yum. In the future, for certain surgeries, the bandage could replace stitches, staples and adhesive tapes that are already on the market, the bandage's inventors wrote in a paper they published today in the journal Nature Communications. Compared to sutures and staples, the bandage is quicker and easier to use, and it sticks better than other tapes, they wrote. In addition, its surface of small spines could inject drugs into the skin, they said. The inventing team, including researchers from universities and...

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