A spy in the belly
Researchers at ETH Zurich and Empa have developed a patch with a sensor function. It can be used to seal wounds in the abdomen after surgery. The polymer patch warns before the occurrence of dangerous leaks on sutures in the gastrointestinal tract.
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In brief
- A new surgical patch for use in surgeries in the abdomen not only seals the wound, but also provides early warning of a potential leak.
- A potential leak can be detected with ultrasound and computer tomography.
- The scientists from ETH Zurich and Empa now aim to bring the patch into the clinic.
After surgery on the stomach or intestines, they are dreaded: leaks at the sutures where the contents of the digestive tract can sip into the abdomen. "Even today, such leaks are a life-threatening complication," explains Inge Herrmann, Professor of Nanoparticular Systems at ETH Zurich and a researcher at Empa in St. Gallen.
The idea of sealing sutured tissue in the abdominal cavity with a plaster has already arrived in operating rooms. But the patches used, which are made of protein-containing material, dissolve too quickly when they come into contact with digestive juices. Researchers from Herrmann's group have therefore joined forces with Andrea Schlegel, surgeon at the University Hospital Zurich, to look for new solutions.
Over the past few years, the scientists have developed a plaster made of polymers that form a hydrogel, i.e. can absorb fluid. The polymers cross-link with the intestinal tissue and seal the wound. In this way, the patch prevents the acidic digestive juices and germ-laden food residues from escaping from the digestive tract and triggering peritonitis or even life-threatening blood poisoning.
Sensor reacts to acid and enzymes
Now the researchers have gone one step further: “Surgeons have told us that they keep a close eye on the surgical field during even the most complicated procedures – but as soon as the abdominal cavity is closed, they are ‘blind’ and may not notice leaks until it is too late,” says Alexandre Anthis, postdoc in Herrmann's group and co-developer of the patch.
“The intestinal patch project is already attracting a great deal of interest from the medical profession.”Inge Herrmann
The researchers have therefore equipped their patch with non-electronic sensors that already indicate before digestive juices can leak into the abdominal cavity. The sensors are protein structures or salts incorporated into the patch that react either to changes in pH caused by escaping gastric acid or to certain enzymes present in the intestine. When the sensor elements come into contact with digestive juices, their structure changes, which doctors can detect from outside the body using biomedical imaging.
Eye-catching shape
As the researchers report in the latest issue of the journal external page Advanced Science, they have succeeded in equipping the sensor elements in such a way that their reaction can also be detected by computer tomography (CT). This was possible because, thanks to a combination of reactive salts and insoluble tantalum oxide, the scientists were able to shape the sensor elements in a way that is conspicuous in computed CT. “On contact with digestive fluid, for example, the sensor changes its shape from a filled round area to a ring,” says Benjamin Suter, doctoral student in Herrmann’s group and first author of the latest study.
The researchers already developed the sensor elements in a paper published last year, at that time still without a shape-changing function. Moreover, at that time it was not yet possible to detect the structural change in the plaster after a sensor reaction with CT, but only with ultrasound imaging. Now the change can be seen with both imaging techniques.
"In future, a sensor whose shape clearly stands out from anatomical structures in CT and ultrasound images, could reduce ambiguity of impending leak diagnostics," explains Herrmann. The intestinal patch could thus not only reduce the risk of complications after abdominal surgery, but also shorten hospital stays and save healthcare costs. "The intestinal patch project is already attracting a great deal of interest from the medical profession," says the ETH professor. Now it is important to advance the application of the clinically relevant innovation in practice.
Award-winning young researchers
The research team is currently founding a start-up, external page Veltist. As a spin-off of ETH Zurich and Empa, the future Medtech company aims to develop and bring to market materials that are intended to contribute to optimal wound closure and improved healing in surgery, thus helping to avoid the dreaded complications of sepsis or peritonitis. In addition to the MaP 2022 Award from ETH Zurich for the best dissertation in the field of Materials and Processes, Alexandre Anthis also received one of the coveted ETH Pioneer Fellowships as well as the Empa Research Award 2021.
This is a shortened and modified version of an external page Empa press release, written by Andrea Six.
Reference
Suter B, Anthis AHC, Zehnder AK, Mergen V, Rosendorf J, Gerken LRH, Schlegel AA, Korcakova E, Liska V, Herrmann IK: Surgical Sealant with Integrated ShapeMorphing Dual Modality Ultrasound and Computed Tomography Sensors for Gastric Leak Detection; Advanced Science, 5 June 2023, doi: external page 10.1002/advs.202301207