Biocompatible thin film to make thermotherapy more common
Published: October 6, 2021
Tokyo Tech researchers have developed a small, flexible thin film device that can be implanted in the body and powered wirelessly to generate heat. Utilizing induction heating, a magnetic field is applied to the device from outside the body, raising the temperature of the contacting internal tissue. And since tumor tissue is more sensitive to heat than normal tissue, the device has potential for application in cancer thermotherapy. The device consists of an electrical circuit printed with biocompatible gold nano ink on polylactic acid film, a biomass plastic.
Biocompatible thin film: Heating tissue with surgical precision to kill cancer! | Tokyo Tech News Turning the Heat on: A Flexible Device for Localized Heat Treatment of Living Tissues | Tokyo Tech News Toshinori Fujie selected as "Emerging Investigators 2019" by Biomaterials Science | Tokyo Tech News Fujie Laboratory Researcher Profile | Tokyo Tech STAR Search - Toshinori Fujie Department of Life Science and Technology, School of Life Science and Technology
