Illustration of a biodegradable microneedle patch applied to damaged heart tissue, promoting healing after a heart attack.
Illustration of a biodegradable microneedle patch applied to damaged heart tissue, promoting healing after a heart attack.
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Researchers test microneedle patch to improve heart attack recovery

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A Texas A&M University team has developed a biodegradable microneedle patch that delivers interleukin‑4 directly to damaged heart tissue after a heart attack. In preclinical models, this targeted approach shifts immune cells into a healing mode and improves communication between heart muscle and blood vessel cells, while avoiding many of the side effects seen with systemic drug delivery.

Heart attacks deprive heart muscle cells of oxygen and nutrients, leading to cell death and the formation of scar tissue. While this scarring helps stabilize the damaged area, it cannot contract like healthy muscle, forcing the remaining heart tissue to work harder and potentially contributing to heart failure over time.

To address this, a team led by Dr. Ke Huang at Texas A&M University has created a biodegradable microneedle patch that delivers interleukin‑4 (IL‑4), a molecule known for regulating immune responses, directly to injured cardiac tissue. Each tiny needle in the patch contains microscopic particles loaded with IL‑4. When the patch is applied to the surface of the heart, the microneedles penetrate the outer layer and dissolve, releasing the drug into the damaged muscle underneath, according to Texas A&M’s release.

By concentrating IL‑4 at the site of injury, the patch encourages macrophages — key immune cells — to shift from a pro‑inflammatory state to a reparative one. This change helps limit excessive scar formation and supports better functional recovery in the preclinical models described. “Macrophages are the key,” Huang said in the university’s announcement. “They can either make inflammation worse or help the heart heal. IL‑4 helps turn them into helpers.”

Previous attempts to use IL‑4 to repair heart tissue relied on injections into the bloodstream, which circulated the molecule throughout the body and led to unwanted effects in other organs. The localized microneedle approach is designed to focus treatment on the heart while minimizing systemic exposure. “Systemic delivery affects the whole body,” Huang said. “We wanted to target just the heart.”

The study team also reported notable changes in how treated heart muscle cells, or cardiomyocytes, behaved after patch application. In laboratory and animal studies, cardiomyocytes became more responsive to signals from surrounding tissues, particularly endothelial cells lining blood vessels. Huang said this enhanced cell‑to‑cell communication appeared to support recovery. “The cardiomyocytes weren’t just surviving, they were interacting with other cells in ways that support recovery,” he noted.

Researchers observed that the patch reduced inflammatory signals from endothelial cells, which can otherwise worsen damage after a heart attack. They also detected increased activity in a signaling route known as the NPR1 pathway, which is associated with blood vessel health and overall heart function.

At present, placing the patch requires open‑chest surgery in the animal models used. Huang and his colleagues say they hope to adapt the technology for minimally invasive delivery in the future, envisioning a version that could be inserted through a small tube to make it more practical in clinical settings.

The work, funded by the National Institutes of Health and the American Heart Association, was published in the journal Cell Biomaterials. The study, which tested the patch in rodent and porcine models of myocardial infarction, is an early‑stage, proof‑of‑concept effort and is not yet available as a treatment for patients.

Looking ahead, Huang is collaborating with Xiaoqing (Jade) Wang, an assistant professor of statistics in Texas A&M’s College of Arts and Sciences, on an artificial intelligence model to map immune responses and guide future immunomodulatory therapies. “This is just the beginning,” Huang said. “We’ve proven the concept. Now we want to optimize the design and delivery.”

사람들이 말하는 것

X discussions on the Texas A&M microneedle patch for heart attack recovery are limited but positive, with science accounts and enthusiasts sharing preclinical results on targeted IL-4 delivery to promote healing, reduce inflammation, and avoid systemic side effects. Users express excitement about its potential for minimally invasive treatments, though no skeptical or negative opinions were prominent.

관련 기사

Scientists in a lab celebrating conditional approval of iPS cell products for treating Parkinson's and heart disease.
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보건부 전문가 패널, iPS 세포 제품 조건부 승인

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보건부 전문가 패널이 파킨슨병과 중증 심장병 치료를 위한 유도만능줄기(iPS) 세포 유래 재생 의료 제품 2개를 조건부로 승인했다. 이는 노벨상 수상 줄기세포 기술의 상용화에서 세계 최초 가능성을 나타낸다. 소규모 임상 시험에서 안전성과 추정 효능이 확인된 이번 승인은 7년 내 사후 시장 검증을 요구한다.

A team from Universidad Técnica Federico Santa María has created a biomimetic patch using ulmo honey to regenerate wounds and burns. The material, based on nanotechnology, mimics human skin structure and promotes cell growth. Researchers highlight its economic potential compared to imported alternatives.

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Researchers at the University of California, Riverside say they have developed a flexible, battery-powered gel patch that generates oxygen inside hard-to-heal wounds—an approach aimed at countering deep-tissue oxygen deprivation that can stall recovery and contribute to amputations. In experiments in diabetic and older mice, the team reported that wounds that often remained open—and were sometimes fatal—closed in about 23 days when treated with the oxygen-generating patch.

홍콩대학교 연구진이 허혈성 뇌졸중 환자의 응급 처치를 위해 신경 치료용 분말을 뇌로 직접 전달하는 세계 최초의 비강 분무제를 개발했다. '나노파우더(NanoPowder)'로 명명된 이 치료제는 뇌 손상을 80% 이상 줄이고 뇌졸중 생존율을 높이도록 설계되었으며, 2030년까지 임상 시험이 진행될 예정이다.

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Japan's health ministry panel on Thursday approved the commercialization of two regenerative medicine products derived from iPS cells, marking a global first. These treatments target patients with severe heart failure and Parkinson's disease, under a conditional approval requiring data collection for up to seven years. Shinya Yamanaka, pioneer of iPS cell research, expressed delight at this milestone.

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