TORONTO, May 30, 2016 -- Healthcare innovations continue to amaze, particularly those enabled by plastics.
Advances in medical technology touch all of us, from preemie babies to senior citizens. Two basic advances alone—sterile plastic packaging and disposable medical items—have helped prevent countless infections, one of the world's leading causes of death.
Some healthcare innovations that once seemed futuristic have become a part of everyday treatment. Think back to those old medical shows, where a misstep in the operating room would send a fragile glass blood bottle crashing to the floor. Modern advances would seem like miracles to those surgeons dealing with trauma. Today, these innovations have become standard operating procedure.
You want to talk futuristic? How about an injectable plastic designed to prevent bleeding on the battlefield or city streets? Another healthcare innovation that someday we may take for granted. And that just might save the life of someone you love.
Let's take a look at a few recent healthcare innovations made possible by plastics:
Plastic Meniscus: Approximately 55,000 people in Canada have knee replacement surgery each year—that number is expected to soar as the baby boom generation ages. Enter a potential alternative: a plastic meniscus. What's a meniscus? It's the cartilage in your knee between the thigh and shin bones. And as you might imagine, a torn meniscus can hurt … a lot. Plus, it won't heal on its own, so patients often opt for knee replacement surgery. In 2015, surgeons implanted the first plastic meniscus in North America as a part of a U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA) approved clinical trial (it's already in use in Europe). This minimally invasive alternative—made possible by plastics—could help avoid major knee replacements.
Plastic To Prevent Bleeding: Researchers are developing an injectable plastic designed to staunch bleeding caused by trauma. A first responder carrying a preloaded syringe would inject the plastic into the patient on-site to improve blood clotting and reduce bleeding. Other clotting treatments typically require refrigerated or frozen blood products—this syringe could be carried in a backpack. This device potentially could save countless lives on the battlefield or in places without nearby healthcare. Alas, this healthcare innovation is down the road a bit—researchers say it could reach human clinical trials in five years.
Disappearing Plastic Stent: Quick vocab lesson: resorbable implants are medical devices typically made with plastics that perform a specific function and then are resorbed by the body. Pretty amazing, right? Sometimes they're simply called dissolvable.
While they're not particularly new, recent advances are leading to materials that can better promote healing and reduce immune response. For example, one device maker sees vast opportunities for improving cardiovascular care using resorbable implants made with the plastic poly glycerol sebacate (PGS). They note that the material more closely simulates the properties of human tissue, resulting in improved compatibility with bodily tissue—so far, just at the academic level.
One really cool plastic device appears on the cusp of making the jump from academics to the real world: an FDA panel approved resorbable plastic heart stent that also delivers targeted drugs. The stent does its job—opening a heart blockage and dispensing medication—and then just disappears over time. The device is already used in Europe, and its maker expects full FDA approval.
3-D Printed Plastic Vertebrae: Imagine losing one or more vertebrae to trauma or cancer. Now imagine creating a replacement using biocompatible plastics and 3-D printing. Actually, you don't need to imagine the latter. The FDA approved such a device in 2015, a load bearing design for long-term replacement of damaged or unstable vertebrae. The plastic mimics the mechanical properties of bone, enabling the body to adapt to the implant.
To learn more about plastics and healthcare innovations, click here.
Today's intelligent plastics are vital to the modern world. These materials enhance our lifestyles, our economy and the environment. For more information, visit www.intelligentplastics.ca.
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A photo accompanying this release is available at: http://www.globenewswire.com/newsroom/prs/?pkgid=40400
CONTACT: Darlene Gray
Canadian Plastics Industry Association
905.678.7748 ext. 239


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