HP Skin Patch May Replace Needles 190
Iddo Genuth writes "HP and Crospon have developed a skin patch employing microneedles that barely penetrate the skin. The microneedles can replace conventional injections and deliver drugs through the skin without causing any pain. The skin patch technology also enables delivery of several drugs by one patch and the control of dosage and of administration time for each drug. It has the potential to be safer and more efficient than injections."
Well... (Score:2, Insightful)
Re:Forget drawing blood... we're turning into puss (Score:2)
Re:Forget drawing blood... we're turning into puss (Score:2)
In speculative fiction for a while (Score:2, Interesting)
Re:In speculative fiction for a while (Score:5, Funny)
Wouldn't a cheese-grater be quicker?
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one character has a sedative-filled needle implanted on her cervix in order to incapcitate a rapist.
Wouldn't a cheese-grater be quicker?
It's a good joke but the truth is that the last thing a woman wants is for a rapist with a hard-on to become a rapist with a butchered cock. He'd kill her at that point. It's better to knock the guy out and get away rather than risk leaving him maimed and enraged. Once he's knocked out, of course, his victim would be free to do as she pleases with his junk. I'm thinking something like a spring-loaded bear trap but scaled down to work on the winky.
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It wasn't some giant needle that would tear him to pieces, it was a MICRO needle filled with sedative that knocks him out for 6 hours or so. She forgets to take it out at one point and hilarity ensues- especially as her partner was an infamous terrorist assassin with a bad temper.
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But its ok, it happens to the best of us.
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Guess you never read the book- and you need to it's required reading for slashdot >:|
It wasn't some giant needle that would tear him to pieces, it was a MICRO needle filled with sedative that knocks him out for 6 hours or so. She forgets to take it out at one point and hilarity ensues- especially as her partner was an infamous terrorist assassin with a bad temper.
I've read Snowcrash. Also, the audiobook version is very good. I was just commenting on the cheese grater bit. Real life anti-rape inserts I've read about are less like cheese graters, more like apple slicers -- cylinder with razor blades tucked away inside. Dicks will check in but they won't check out. But again, it leaves the girl at the mercy of an enraged, mutilated rapist.
As far as the visual image goes of that chick and Raven getting it on, it sounds like the story of the perv who showed up at an ER
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Re:In speculative fiction for a while (Score:5, Funny)
For example: http://pbfcomics.com/?cid=PBF051-Zarflax.jpg [pbfcomics.com]
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Although I don't see how this thing will help, it seems like a bleeding dick would not incapacitate the attacker enough to prevent him from beating the shit out of his victim instead of raping her.
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I'm betting that a man with hooks in his jimmy would be too distracted to be beating anybody. Hell, just thinking about it brings me to my knees.
Timmarhy, it sounds like you have some issues with women. You didn't by any chance have a bad experience with one of these Rapex devices, did you?
Re:In speculative fiction for a while (Score:5, Insightful)
I think the issue has to do with separating morally important acts with moral content from morally unimportant acts: rape has moral content, wearing this clothing or walking down that street does not.
Here's an example using street gangs: they wear different colors to identify themselves. So if you wear a red sweatshirt and the blue shirt gang shoots you, they did an immoral act, whereas your act cannot be construed as "immoral" and therefore you can't be blamed for your own shooting.
If you're going to allow such morally unimportant and therefore arbitrary factors when assigning blame, then you get a slippery slope where things that are not only unimportant but also beyond a person's control are used...such as your gender. So we find people saying, essentially, the man who raped the woman was not guilty--it was the woman's fault for A) being female and B) being around men, who cannot be expected to control themselves.
The obvious remedy is not for the law to enforce women's rights, nor for women to exercise their right as human beings to defend themselves, but rather to blame the women.
If this kind of reasoning makes sense to you, then you might be a Saudi judge.
Now, it is perfectly reasonable to advise people on risky behaviors: watch what you wear to reduce your chances of getting shot. Don't go get so drunk you can't stand up when you're all alone. Don't hold hands walking down Crime Alley in Gotham City. And so forth. But "being vulnerable" is still not an immoral act.
Some people do think it is, but they only want to justify their position of strength--alas, power doesn't justify itself, though powerful people wish it did.
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If they where easily overlookable, and not noticeable to the woman, as is claimed on the site, then by far most victims would be lovers of the women in question, because women generally voluntarily have sex several orders of magnitude more often than they are raped.
So, in the end, the result would be some innocent men hurt. Some forgetful women sued. And no difference either way to rape-statistics.
That's
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Just like that, huh? It sounds like you're not too familiar with female anatomy. I don't think it would be quite that easy for a rapist to remove one of these devices before proceeding.
Your comment reminds me of a recent episode of South Park, where Cartman's plan to swipe a book from the one of the girls was: "OK, Butters, you run up and kick her in the balls, and we'll grab the book". The first plan failed, but at least they learned that girls
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Wow! How'd we jump from needle-less drug administration to weaponized birth control devices?
But, speaking of cyberpunk, these sound more like the slap patches and dots Molly used in Neuromancer for pain meds.
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Did someone say hypospray? (Score:4, Funny)
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Now the question is HP? Really? The people who built my printer? And laptop? I guess that development of the inkjet has other applications.
Selex
Really?
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I think Powder Ject has been purchased by another company, but I'm not sure which, and it was going to be released for this year's flu shot, although I haven't seen it yet.
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Not for nothing but the actually painful injections tend to be the intramuscular ones...for which "finding a vein" is not part of the playbook. I agree though, a skilled intravenous needle shouldn't hurt; I donate blood regularly, and every flobotamist I've ever had worth half a damn did the original stick without more that a little minor discomfort. The damn spring loaded prick-needle for the anemia test hurts more.
Dude, re:patch=evil, I get where you are coming from--in theory--but this is way too cynic
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Is a flobotomist someone who uses Flowbees [flowbee.com] to cut hair?
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Cute sig...the word fell out of my brain while I was still sleeping and, yes, I haven't written it in a long while. Good catch, annoying pedant. :)
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It lends itself to a corollary that's almost as funny: Never use a word in spoken form that you've only read never heard. You will end up sounding foolish.
Consider the potential abuses (Score:2, Interesting)
On the other hand, it would be much safer than using needles.
You can't really share these, I assume.
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You would never inject heroin (or meth, coke etc.) in anything but a vein, though, because it would feel like someone stabbed you with a red-hot-po
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(MOD THIS UP!)
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Not by choice, no, but there comes a time in every addict's life when he's used up even the veins in his fingers and toes, and he has no choice but subcutaneous or intramuscular injection.
And thanks for the warning about meth, that's one of the drugs I plan to die without trying. I'll give a weaker amphetamine a go if
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Yeah, and the replacements will cost 400 times what the original cost.
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one more brick in the wall (Score:3, Funny)
Excellent. So when does Soma come out?
It's out. (Score:2)
It's out. Soma is the US trade name for the muscle relaxant Carisoprodol [wikipedia.org]. It's a particularly nice and powerful muscle relaxant/sedative. My mom and sister (both of whom have chronic back/neck and muscular pain) absolutely swear by it.
:)
I personally think it took great chutzpah by the manufacturer to use that name.
Previously on Slashdot (Score:4, Informative)
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Oh, and next time just use Google (site:SlashDot.org "YourPhraseHere"), it is a thousand times easier.
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Now we need sensors in those patches (Score:4, Insightful)
For example, a patch could sense the cardiac rhythm and control it chemically. Another could control blood sugar, etc.
What I imagine is someone witnessing a car accident, taking four patches from his car's medikit putting them in different parts of the hurt person and calling an ambulance while the patches stabilize the patient.
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Re:Now we need sensors in those patches (Score:5, Informative)
No company wants to open that bag of liability issues. If your device makes medical decisions (instead of leaving them to a physician), you make yourself a big fat blinking glowing target for all sorts of legal trouble. Current example: Infusion pumps. While studies show that feedback-controlled infusion pumps lead to better patient outcomes, no company wants to make them because they don't want to get slapped with a multi-million-dollar lawsuit for the one patient in a thousand who thinks he might have had a better outcome with a standard infusion pump.
Re:Now we need sensors in those patches (Score:5, Insightful)
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The first corporations allowed investors to finance ships to sail to America in search of gold, but stopped the lawyers from bankrupting the inv
Well, sorry. (Score:2)
That changes when your device starts making decisions which are usually left to a physician. There's only a very small number of devices out there that do so right now (AEDs, implantable defibrillators and such), and they base their decisions on fairly trivial parameters and only act when the likely outcome of not doing so is a dead patient.
Meanwhile,
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Tattoos (Score:5, Interesting)
Just add alcohol.
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I could imagine instant tattoos -- patches with designs on them, subcutaneous injection of inks.
Off-topic, but, tattoo technology *is* improving this year. Dye will be stored in small capsules, that can be burst open by laser and thus removed easily with a single laser treatment: http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/19845335/ [msn.com] So yes, maybe it'll be easier to get tattoos as well.Pain? (Score:2)
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How do you get the cat to hold still?
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If I can't see it (it's microscopic) or feel it (it doesn't go deep enough to hit any nerves), is it really there? I know it's there, but does my subconscious?
My question is
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It won't replace all needles. Blood drawing and intramuscular shots won't be able to be delivered this way, and they are definitely more painful than IV or subcutaneous shots. I doubt even IV shots would be replaceable with this.
Also not even all subcutaneous shots can be administered with a small needle; some of them have a
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Those of us who deal with a fear of needles welcome tech like this with open arms. I had some rough experiences as a child (we'll leave it at that) which has made it difficult for me to handle any sort of needle - I can't even watch it on TV. It doesn't really hurt much at all, but the act of getting punctured by large needles (any needle I can see and feel the tip on is large to me) makes me stress out like nobody's business.
Then you have to deal with needles that have been used (but sterilized) that h
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I think this breakthrough is dealing more with the after affects pain caused by the dermis having to repair itself from a "rip." Some people bruise, others develop a knot and most simply have a tender spot for 12-24 hours. Whereas the epidermis repairs quickly and painlessly
Stinging nettle (Score:4, Interesting)
This actually sounds kind of like how stinging nettle works. I recently touched some by accident, and I can assure you, the needles on the surface of that leaf are so small that I couldn't feel them at all.
The cocktail of formic acid and histamines contained within the needles, on the other hand, were quite noticeable (ouch!). Of course, I'm assuming that HP is not planning to use this invention to deliver anything that's painful by design.
Depends. (Score:2)
Depends on what kind of government contracts they're getting. I bet some agencies out there are just drooling at the prospect of having ready-made, pre-packaged units of pain that do not leave any permanent marks or damage at their disposal.
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I thought that was nausea, not pain
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Something similiar. (Score:2)
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Why the hell they would bother is beyond me. The only reasons I can think of would be to help someone who was ner
Beware (Score:4, Funny)
I foresee scores of people walking around with the HP logo tattooed where the patch was. Later the advertising space will be sold to other companies. Attempts to sue will be stymied by the fact that the devices will come with an EULA that clearly states that your skin doesn't belong to you while using the device, and the device can leave residues there. You will be forced to accept the EULA or else die from your sickness, but HP's lawyers will insist that was you "free and informed decision".
Just wait.
Types of injection (Score:5, Insightful)
I think it's a little premature to say that this patch will replace conventional injections entirely. It might seem obvious that a patch couldn't really hope to deliver injections into the muscles without penetrating all the layers of skin, but I think it at least bears mentioning.
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Classic patches, such as nicotine ones, work because the skin is porous to that chemical, so there are strong limitations to what can be done with them, but for a diabetic, it could be awesome: instead of injecting himself a large dose of insulin no
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but for a diabetic, it could be awesome: instead of injecting himself a large dose of insulin now and then, he could use a patch and have his insulin slowly and regulary injected. Too much insulin, remove the patch for a couple of hours, too little, add a second one for a couple of hours. Simple, painless and safe.
Now that they've stopped producing Exubera (well, will stop in 2 more months) it's great to hear about this kind of thing. I never really understood this (supposed? real?) consumer disinterest in inhaled insulin. Especially now starting back on injections, it was SO much easier with the inhaled stuff.
Not even just for lack of pain - one of the biggest benefits, at least to me, was no longer having to take shots in the car with people walking by thinking i'm a heroin addict, or in a restaurant bathroom w
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Bad headline (Score:2)
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Novelty? (Score:2, Interesting)
Hmmmmm (Score:2, Funny)
Can this be true? (Score:2)
Saw This About Ten Years Ago (Score:2)
Pretty much exactly this idea (completely with microscopic view of a prototype) was featured about a decade or so ago in Scientific American. (I think it was SciAm, anyway.) I don't recall who was working on the product at that time — I doubt it was HP, but I find myself wondering what's either different about this version (perhaps the system of propelling the drugs through the microneedles?) or why the other product hasn't appeared/taken off yet and, as a result, why this will do better.
Re:Niccotine patch did it already? (Score:4, Informative)
This ones enter through micro needles.
Re:Thank god... (Score:5, Funny)
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It's not so much the pain, it's more that my ellbow pit looks like I'm a junkie or something for days. Now try to wear a t-shirt to work.
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A few colonoscopies [wikipedia.org] really put things in perspective, though. Now needles - even the massively long needled B12 injection my partner has to give me every month, which requires a few pre-injection beers - are generally a walk in the park.
I guess that's why I read this article and though, "Huh. What a waste of research time."
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I have unusually, inhumanly low body fat. I'm just about as underweight as it's possible to be without there being an immediate medical danger.
Last time I was immunized, they had to pinch my arm to get enough muscle to inject into. On their first four tries, the needle stabbed me in the bone.
IT HURT.
-:sigma.SB
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Any word on when the bugfix for #212 Androgenic Alopecia is going to be done? The recommended workaround, running the Monoxodil UI, is costing me a fortune in license fees.