Breaking Boundaries in Bioengineering
Imagine being a new parent and told your baby has an abnormal build-up of fluid on the brain, that a tube can be inserted to drain the excess fluid, only there’s a good chance in that in the future the tube will block?
The development of a remote monitoring device that can be inserted into the brains of people with hydrocephalus will be one of the cutting-edge areas of research presented by the Auckland Bioengineering Institute (ABI), at Breaking Boundaries in Bioengineering as part of TechWeek2021
Professor
Simon Malpas who heads the Implantable Devices Research
Group at the ABI, will describe his research into the
development of a tiny implantable pressure sensor device
that can be implanted in the brain of people with
hydrocephalus.
Hydrocephalus is the most common
among infants and one of the most frequently treated
neurological disorders worldwide. It is caused by an
obstruction in the circulation of cerebrospinal fluid (CFS)
in ventricles deep inside the brain, which puts pressure on
the brain tissue, and can cause a range of impairments in
brain function.
Dr Malpas group is in the final crucial
stages of research before the remote-sensing implantable
device can be trialled in adults with the disorder, and
could be life-changing for those with the disorder and their
caregivers. “It also represents a major advance in the
potential of telehealth, to use such technologies to meet
the needs of patients and their caregivers, no matter they
live or their socioeconomic status,” says Dr
Malpas.
Dr Malpas will be joined by Dr Hayley
Reynolds, who is developing advanced software tools and
imaging biomarkers to enable precision treatment of
melanoma, breast cancer and prostate cancer.
They
will also be joined by Amit Barde who is part of the ABI’s
Empathic Computing Laboratory at the ABI, which is exploring
new ways for technology to enable people to better
understand one another, and communicate in Virtual
Reality.
Register for Breaking
Boundaries in Bioengineering, Shakespeare Restaurant
& Brewery, 25 May,
6pm.