Loading...
Here is your SignReally?

No more Trypanophobia! At least in Japan…

Trypanophobia is the extreme and irrational fear of medical procedures involving injections or hypodermic needles. Yep, fear of vaccination!

Kanji Takada, a professor of pharmacokinetics – or the study of the absorption, distribution and fate of substances delivered to the human body – has developed a round vaccine “chip” measuring just 1.5 cm in diameter that contains as many as 300 micro needles.

The device can deliver drugs to the body without breaking the dermis layer of skin.

By penetrating just 0.5 millimetres before the needles dissolve and administer the vaccine, the patient feels no discomfort and there is no bleeding, said Professor Takada, of Kyoto Pharmaceutical University.

It has taken Professor Takada six years to develop the new drug delivery system, with earlier efforts by other researchers to use microneedles made out of sugar failing because they degraded at temperatures above 100 degrees centigrade, he said.

Professor Takada replaced sugar with a water-soluble polymer that dissolves when pressed into the epidermis, the very outer layer of skin, releasing the vaccine to be absorbed into the circulatory system.

Each of the dozens of needles is a mere 0.5 mm long and 0.3 mm wide at the base and tests show that the efficiency of the vaccine is not adversely affected by the method of delivery.

Professor Takada’s new injection system could be available for use in hospitals in Japan within two years.

Source: telegraph.co.uk

Leave a Reply