Reporters may obtain a copy of the report from the National Academies' Office of News and Public Information. Contact Jennifer Wenger, Media Relations Associate; Phone (202) 334-2138, Fax (202) 334-2158, or at Jwenger@nas.edu. Copies of the report are available from the National Academy Press for $27.75 (prepaid) plus shipping charges of $4.50 for the first copy and $.95 for each additional copy; Phone (202) 334-3313 or 1-800-624-6242. Previous stories relating to Professor Ferrari's research: "New Technique Builds Microscopic Medical Devices For Transplants," 8/29/99. "Ohio State University Researcher Receives Award For Biomedical Research," 10/26/99. |
BIOTECHNOLOGY TO PROTECT SOLDIERS OF THE FUTURE, REPORT SAYSCOLUMBUS, Ohio -- Biotechnology could protect American soldiers from injury, infection, and chemical weapons on the high-tech battlegrounds of the future, according to a report released by the National Research Council (NRC) today. Mauro Ferrari, Director of the Biomedical Engineering Center and Associate Director of the Heart and Lung Research Institute at Ohio State University, served on the advisory committee for the report, entitled "Opportunities in Biotechnology for Future Army Applications."
Among technologies discussed in the report is Ferrari's area of investigation: tiny medical devices that are so small, they must be measured in micrometers or nanometers -- millionths or billionths of a meter. Ferrari is developing tiny silicon capsules -- about the size of a pinhead -- that can be implanted beneath the skin to deliver medicine. Such capsules could contain sensors that monitor a person's health and dispense medicine when needed. The NRC report suggested that these capsules could one day
detect when a soldier has been exposed to biological warfare
agents, and dispense appropriate antidotes. The same kind of
capsule could dispense antibiotics to injured soldiers, as well,
if needed.
Ferrari's colleagues on the report committee included researchers from University of California, Berkeley; Case Western Reserve University; University of Connecticut; University of Georgia; Massachusetts Institute of Technology; University of Michigan; Princeton University; and Purdue University. Representatives from General Motors, Photonic Sensor Systems, Inc., Cepheid, Inc., TranXenoGen, Inc., and the Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency served on the committee as well. Contact: Mauro Ferrari, (614) 292-4756; Ferrari.5@osu.edu |