NASA Space Technology
Shines New Light On Healing
Doctors at
the Medical College of Wisconsin in Milwaukee have discovered the
healing power of light with the help of technology developed for
NASA's Space Shuttle. Using powerful light-emitting diodes, or LEDs,
originally designed for commercial plant growth research in space,
scientists have found a way to help patients here on Earth.
Doctors are
examining how this special lighting technology helps hard-to-heal
wounds, such as diabetic skin ulcers, serious burns and severe oral
sores caused by chemotherapy and radiation. The project, approved
by the U.S. Food and Drug Administration and funded by NASA Small
Business Innovation Research contract through the Technology Transfer
Department at Marshall, includes laboratory and human trials.
"So far,
what we've seen in patients and what we've seen in laboratory cell
cultures, all point to one conclusion," said Dr. Harry Whelan,
professor of pediatric neurology and director of hyperbaric medicine
at the Medical College of Wisconsin. "The near-infrared light
emitted by these LEDs seems to be perfect for increasing energy
inside cells. This means whether you are on Earth in a hospital,
working in a submarine under the sea or on your way to Mars inside
a spaceship, the LEDs boost energy to the cells and accelerate healing."
Whelan's findings
will be summarized in upcoming issues of Space Technology and Applications
International Forum 2001 and in The Journal of Clinical Laser Medicine
and Surgery. Other related peer-reviewed journals have published
articles on Whelan's medical research with light-emitting diodes.
Whelan's NASA-funded
research has already seen remarkable results using the light-emitting
diodes to promote healing of painful mouth ulcers caused by cancer
therapies such as radiation and chemotherapy. The treatment is quick
and painless.
The wound-healing
device is a small, 3.5-inch by 4.5-inch (89-millimeter by 114-millimeter),
portable, flat array of LEDs, arranged in rows on top of a small
box. A nurse practitioner places the box of LEDs on the outside
of the patient's cheek about one minute each day. The red light
penetrates to the inside of the mouth, where it seems to promote
wound healing and prevent further sores in patient's mouth.
"Some children
who probably would have had to be fed intravenously because of the
severe sores in their mouths have been able to eat solid food,"
said Dr. David Margolis, an assistant professor of pediatrics at
the Medical College of Wisconsin and an oncologist at Children's
Hospital of Wisconsin. Margolis continued, "Preventing oral
mucositis improves the patients' ability to eat and drink and also
may reduce the risk of infections in patients with compromised immune
systems."
Whelan's collaboration
with NASA began when Ronald Ignatius, owner of Quantum Devices,
Inc. in Barneveld, Wisc., learned about Whelan's brain cancer surgery
technique using drugs stimulated by laser lights. Laser-light surgical
probes are costly and cumbersome in the operating room because they
are heavy, with refrigerator-size optical, electrical and cooling
systems.
Ignatius originally
designed the lights for plant growth experiments through the Wisconsin
Center for Space Automation and Robotics, a NASA commercial space
center at the University of Wisconsin in Madison.
"The LEDs
needed to grow plants in space produced the same wavelengths of
light the doctor needed to remove brain tumors," said Ignatius.
"Plus, when we developed the LEDs for NASA, they had to be
lightweight to fly aboard the shuttle and have small cooling systems.
These traits make the LED surgery probes easier to use in the operating
room and thousands of dollars cheaper than laser systems."
Quantum Devices
altered the surgical probe to emit longer wavelengths of red light
that stimulate a photodynamic drug called Benzoporphyrin Derivative.
Doctors at the
Children's Hospital of Wisconsin recently completed the first ever
surgery with the improved probe and medicine. The drug also has
fewer side effects after surgery. The ongoing brain surgery study
is described in a 1999 peer-reviewed journal article in Pediatric
Neurosurgery.
The LED research
project will continue for the next 18 months, with doctors studying
100 patients at two major teaching affiliates of the Medical College
of Wisconsin. Researchers will continue to examine the influence
of LEDs on cells grown in the laboratory, and will explore the benefits
that LEDs might provide to counteract possible cell damage caused
by exposure to harmful radiation and weightlessness during long
space missions.
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