Bandages That Can Turn Off Genes Encourages Wound Healing
MTorrice writes "Medical researchers think specially tailored RNA sequences could kill tumor cells or encourage wound healing by turning off genes in patients' cells. Now researchers have developed a nanocoating for bandages or other medical materials that could deliver these fragile gene-silencing RNAs right where they're needed. The team hopes to produce a bandage that shuts down genes standing in the way of healing in chronic wounds."
Being well healed is always a good thing !!
I wonder if it can cure a nasty case of "leg fell off"?
Grey goo? I Am Legend (Will Smith edition)?
Singe capitulard mangeur de fromage
For Type 1 diabetics,like myself.We are plagued by non-healing chronic open wounds that set up into gangrene.I lost my right foot to such a wound that started as a blister
Geek Hillbilly
Researchers can't seem to make up their mind if "junk" DNA is actually junk or not, but they want a way to mess with it anyway? I really hope they test these things on themselves first.
Obviously one crucial element in the safety/efficacy of anything like this is the identity of the gene/protein involved:-- what exactly is being 'silenced' here and taken away from the wound-healing process?
Whatever, it's not mentioned in either the /. summary or either of the links referred to. So there's no real clue in the story, or in the links, about whether the application of this delivery technique is likely to be beneficial or the reverse.
Informative reportage?
BandageS ... encourage -there shouldn't be an S in 'encourage'
Fortunately there is absolutely no chance of other infections (In a wound? How absurd!) developing resistance and start hip-hopping and exchanging it about. Or picking up the repressors and passing them on to, say ....
No. The invisible hand of funding and profit-spinning will see to it. You must have faith, in these things.
I thought chronic, poorly-healing wounds were due to poor blood flow. Diabetes wrecks small blood vessels like capillaries, or unconscious people getting bedsores at pressure points.
(-1: Post disagrees with my already-settled worldview) is not a valid mod option.
Foot ulcers in diabetics and bed sores in the elderly are really hard to deal with. Even when blood sugar is under control, these things take a long time to heal. You don't ever want one to happen to you.
Slapping a specially treated bandage on a wound can *genetically* encourage healing? This is tantamount to finding out that you can cure scurvy with vitamin C to the affected people.
--
BMO
I thought of this image a couple of days ago, finished it last night.
This seems to happen every few weeks: I draw something that relates in some weird way to some current event I had no previous idea of.
I've tagged these images as "psychic", for want of a better term.
Anyway, I apologize for hijacking the conversation - couldn't help myself. As you were.
XKCD:Xeric Knowledge Comically Dispen
The same type of scientists who assured us that Genetically modified genes wouldn't get into the food chain (they have) are now saying they can be trusted to know which genes to shut off and which ones not to to speed healing?
Thanks, but I'll trust billions of years of evolution over a few years of human arrogance and pursuit of the profit motive when it comes to wound healing.
And others have mentioned diabetics and the problems they have. Well they should know that Vitamin C speeds wound healing, so it would be highly effective on foot ulcers, wounds that won't heal, and bed sores. This has been know for centuries.
Not sure if you guys knew though.
Looking forward to a patch that I can apply to really bad areas of psoriasis to turn the damned switch off.
Congratulatons, you have managed to parlay your irrational fear of GMO into an irrational fear of entirely unrelated technologies. There's no gene splicing going on here. The RNA material they are embedding into the bandage are not genes, are not being spliced into living cells, and will not replicate. They are basically custom marching orders being sent to the existing genes, temporarily telling certain ones to shut the hell up for the duration of time that the RNA persists in the immediate area. The bandage approach is specifically because the RNA is so fragile as to not deliver effectively via traditional methods. So... you're wrong on so many levels, it boggles the mind.
Welcome to Slashdot, BTW. You fit in just fine.
I agree. Your response *is* phenomenally ignorant. And, overweeningly arrogant. And replicates the drivel and trope that have been used to foist hasty death on humanity, in the name of fame, power, and a quick buck (not necessarily in that order) millenia since the buck was invented, or before drinking radium tonic, using asbestos, lead makeup, leadedgas,and ... well, it's a huge list. Penicillin *was* great, wasn't it? So were CFC's. So was DDT. So was nuclear energy. So was gunpowder assisted coal mining. And, strip mining. Whose discouyrse you mimic, socially.