Pentagon Plans Microchips for Soldier's Brains
By: Deiter Hertzog
Source: Science Daily
The Department of Defense has awarded $1.6 million to the Center
for Bioelectronics, Biosensors and Biochips (C3B) at Clemson
University for the development of an implantable biochip that
could relay vital health information if a soldier is wounded in
battle or a civilian is hurt in an accident.
The biochip, about the size of a grain of rice, could measure
and relay such information as lactate and glucose levels in the
event of a major hemorrhage, whether on the battlefield, at home
or on the highway.
Anthony Guiseppi-Elie, C3B director and Dow Chemical Professor
of Chemical and Biomolecular Engineering and professor of
bioengineering says first responders to the trauma scene could
inject the biochip into the wounded victim and gather data
almost immediately. The device has other long-term potential
applications, such as monitoring astronauts’ vital signs during
long-duration space flights and reading blood-sugar levels for
diabetics.
“We now lose a large percentage of patients to bleeding, and
getting vital information such as how much oxygen is in the
tissue back to ER physicians and medical personnel can often
mean the difference between life and death,” said Guiseppi-Elie.
“Our goal is to improve the quality and expediency of care for
fallen soldiers and civilian trauma victims.” The biochip also
may be injected as a precaution to future traumas, he adds.
Clemson scientists have formulated a gel that mimics human
tissue and reduces the chances of the body rejecting the
biochip, which has been a problem in the past. The researcher
predicts the biochip is five years away from human trials. The
award is funded by the Department of Defense through the Peer
Reviewed Medical Research Program and is a joint study with the
department of molecular pathology at the University of Alabama
at Birmingham and Telesensors Inc. in Knoxville, Tenn.
The Center for Bioelectronics, Biosensors and Biochips, located
in the Clemson University Advanced Materials Center, operates
cooperatively with industry in molecular bioanalytics and
biometrology research. The center focuses on the development of
platform technologies that are of mutual interest to the
industrial consortium members and faculty while providing
education and training for science-, technology-, engineering-
and mathematics-oriented high school students, science teachers,
undergraduates, graduate students and post-doctoral trainees.
www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2007/07/070730184829.htm