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'Electronic skin' patch will do many things
Sunday August 14, 2011 09:14:00 AM,
IANS
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London:
American scientists have created little patches of 'electronic
skin' that might heal wounds and monitor a patient's heart rate in
the near future.
"What we are trying to do here is to really reshape and redefine
electronics...to look a lot more like the human body, in this case
the surface layers of the skin," said John A. Rogers of the
University of Illinois, US.
"The goal is really to blur the distinction between electronics
and biological tissue," he said,
Researchers implanted sensors in a film thinner than a human hair,
which was placed on a polyester backing like those used for the
temporary tattoos popular with children, reports the journal
Science.
The result was a sensor that was flexible enough to move with the
skin and would stick without glue, according to the daily
Telegraph.
Researchers said the devices could stick up to 24 hours. While
normal shedding of skin cells would cause the monitors to come
off, Rogers expected the new devices to remain in place for two
weeks.
Besides monitoring patients, the devices could monitor brain
waves, muscle movement, sensing the larynx for speech, emitting
heat to help heal wounds and perhaps even being made touch
sensitive and placed on artificial limbs, Rogers said.
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