Monday, February 20, 2012

MIT duo successfully tests wireless drug-delivery microchips, more consistent than injections

MIT duo successfully tests wireless drug-delivery microchips, more consistent than injections

Despise those daily injections of essential medication. Well folks, relief could be on the way. Over a decade ago, two MIT professors, Robert Langer and Michael Cima, first considered developing a drug-delivery microchip that could be wirelessly controlled. This past week, researchers in Cambridge — alongside scientists from MicroCHIPS, Inc. — announced that they have successfully used the aforementioned chip to give osteoporosis patients their daily allotment of teriparatide. “You can do remote control delivery, you can do pulsatile drug delivery, and you can deliver multiple drugs,” Langer noted.

2DayBlog.com, MIT duo successfully tests wireless drug-delivery microchips, more consistent than injections

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