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Mending Hearts With Light-Activated Glue

the_newsbeagle writes "When surgeons set out to repair holes in the walls of the heart's chambers or in blood vessels, they often do invasive open-heart surgery and use sutures, staples, and glue to keep a patch in place. But the sutures and staples are a rough fix, and many of the glues on the market today don't work well on wet tissue that's continually flexed by the heart's contractions and the movement of pumping blood. Today biomaterial researchers announced a new light-activated glue that could make surgery less invasive, quicker, and easier. The adhesive was inspired by slugs' and sandcastle worms' sticky secretions, which work underwater, and it can be applied with slender tools during minimally invasive surgery. A flash of UV light then sets the glue, which bends and flexes with the tissue."

1 of 38 comments (clear)

  1. Re:Great technology by pspahn · · Score: -1, Troll

    Ponder the intricate structure of something as fundamental as the Periodic Table of Elements or the constant e and try to argue that these things "just are" and aren't in fact parameters to some entity's ridiculously complex algorithm.

    --
    Someone flopped a steamer in the gene pool.