London, Dec 25 : The hypodermic needle has been around a while—many believe the
concept even dates back centuries.
Of course, there have been upgrades
throughout the years, and now there might be another: Researchers believe
porcupine needles could serve as inspiration for a new and improved
version.
According to a scientific paper published in Proceedings of the
National Academy of Sciences, researchers found that porcupine needles contain
"microscopic backward-facing deployable barbs" that enable penetration and "high
tissue adhesion."
In plain English, that means the needles are really
good at both breaking the skin and staying in place thanks to the barbs. The
discovery could help those who require long-term IVs and be used for medical
treatments that require staples to keep a wound from splitting.
The
scientists made the discovery by measuring "how much force it took to push in
and pull out porcupine quills into pig skin and raw chicken meat," according to
the Smithsonian, which also reported on the study. The researchers then repeated
the experiment using quills without the sticky barbs. Guess which quill worked
better?
In a statement, study co-author James Ankrum of MIT said, "If you
can still create the stress concentrations, but without having a barb that
catches tissue on removal, potentially you could create something with just easy
insertion, without the adhesion."
Scientists have re-created the
porcupine quills in plastic. The Smithsonian reports that they "worked like a
charm." Hooray for prickly rodents!
Ends
SA/EN
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» Porcupine quills inspire new type of hypodermic needle
Porcupine quills inspire new type of hypodermic needle
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