管家婆免费开奖大全

New joints for arthritis sufferers among 管家婆免费开奖大全 research projects receiving Connaught Innovation Award support

Photo of Kandel and Pilliar
Dr. Rita Kandel and Professor Robert Pilliar are working on a promising new treatment that could see diseased joints replaced with new tissue-engineered joints developed at 管家婆免费开奖大全 (photo by Jennifer Robinson)

For millions of Canadians with hands gnarled by arthritis, a promising new treatment could see their diseased joints replaced with new tissue-engineered joints developed at the 管家婆免费开奖大全.

If testing proves successful, the regenerated joints could mean an end to crippling pain and a return to full mobility for patients 鈥 like the ability to open a jar of pickles or write a letter, said Professor Emeritus Robert Pilliar, who has been involved in joint replacement research since the early 1970s.

鈥淗and arthritis is one of the most prevalent forms of osteoarthritis in North America, but for people with finger joint and toe joint arthritis, there really isn鈥檛 a joint implant solution right now,鈥 said Pilliar, who is affiliated with 管家婆免费开奖大全鈥檚 department of materials science and engineering, the Faculty of Dentistry and the Institute of Biomaterials & Biomedical Engineering.

Driving home the need is the fact that there is no cure for most forms of arthritis, Canada鈥檚 most prevalent chronic health condition. Without treatment, this inflammation can lead to 鈥渟ignificant and often irreparable damage to the affected areas, resulting in loss of function and disability,鈥 reports the Arthritis Society.

Pilliar鈥檚 project is one of nine sharing almost $820,000 in funding this year from the , aimed at accelerating the development of promising technologies and promoting knowledge transfer arising from the 管家婆免费开奖大全.  (See all recipients below.)

鈥淲e鈥檇 like to congratulate the recipients of this year鈥檚 Connaught Innovation Award. The Connaught Fund continues to support cutting-edge research at the 管家婆免费开奖大全,鈥 said Vivek Goel, 管家婆免费开奖大全's vice-president of research and innovation.

鈥淭he range of research and innovation activities receiving support is incredible, from new treatments for multiple sclerosis to testing ways to automatically assess dementia from speech, and it showcases the breadth and depth of research at the university.鈥

The internal award is made possible through the , the largest internal university research-funding program in Canada.

Since its creation in 1972 from the sale of the Connaught Laboratories, which produced vaccines, antitoxins and insulin after its discovery by 管家婆免费开奖大全 researchers Frederick Banting and Charles Best, the Connaught Fund has awarded more than $160 million to 管家婆免费开奖大全 scholars.

The email from Connaught 鈥渨as my first email of the New Year,鈥 Pilliar said. 鈥淚t was nice to get that for the New Year. I鈥檓 very thankful.鈥

The funding will enable him to create a model prototype with research colleague Dr. Rita Kandel, professor and chair of the 管家婆免费开奖大全鈥檚 department of laboratory medicine and pathobiology and chief of pathology and laboratory medicine at Mount Sinai Hospital.

Mount Sinai researchers have been trying to develop alternatives to regenerate diseased joint tissues rather than replacing them with commonly used synthetic materials, such as metal, plastic and ceramic, which over time degrade in the body and can cause fractures or chemical sensitivities in patients.

Their research has shown that a porous, biodegradable, calcium polyphosphate construct with a cartilage layer formed by cell culturing over the intended joint-bearing surface, when implanted into the dissected knee joints of sheep, successfully enables the implant to become securely fixed in the site by bone growing into it while maintaining the attached cartilage layer.

However, this immature cartilage had a tendency to 鈥渟hear off鈥 when force was applied to it through movement, Pilliar said. Part of the solution, the researchers think, is to place this regenerated tissue in a joint 鈥 like that in the finger 鈥 that can be immobilized for a period of time with a splint, enabling the cartilage to mature and eventually withstand the everyday wear and tear a joint encounters. 

If their model proves successful, additional funding will be needed to conduct animal studies, clinical trials and to undergo regulatory approvals. Pilliar is hopeful the tissue-engineered digit joints could be available for use in patients within five years.

Pilliar, who underwent his own hip replacement surgery in August, was drawn to the field more than 40 years ago when a colleague told him how often new hip replacements were failing because the 鈥渂one cement鈥 they were using at the time was breaking down, resulting in loosening of the implants.

Pilliar proposed a system that would enable bone to grow into synthetic replacement joints, a principle that is still used today, including in his own new hip.

鈥淚 got into the field by accident,鈥 he said. 鈥淲hat has been very satisfying is to see this system that I developed all the way back in the 1970s still being used today. In fact, most major joint replacements like hips and knees now rely on this 鈥榖one ingrowth鈥 concept rather than using a cement.鈥

He stays motivated, he said, by his desire to come up with something even better. And his own surgery has also taught him how important physiotherapy is to strengthen the soft tissue around the replaced joint, which controls the limb and its motion.

In addition to Pilliar, eight other 管家婆免费开奖大全 researchers are receiving the Connaught Innovation Award. They are:

  • Brenda Andrews of the department of molecular genetics for 鈥淎ccelerating discovery and health care by automating the interpretation of cell and tissue phenotypes.鈥
     
  • Jennifer Gommerman of the department of immunology for 鈥淭NFSF13 as treatment for multiple sclerosis.鈥
     
  • Patrick Gunning of the department of chemical and physical sciences at the 管家婆免费开奖大全 Mississauga for 鈥淒evelopment of a rapid, <10 min diagnostic assay for bacterial infections of blood and CSF.鈥
     
  • Andreas Mandelis of the department of mechanical and industrial engineering for 鈥淒evelopment of dynamic lock-in carrierography (LIC) imaging technology as a quality control tool for the electronics wafer process cleaning industry.鈥
     
  • Andreas Moshovos of the department of electrical and computer engineering for 鈥淎 value-based approach to accelerating deep learning in hardware.鈥
     
  • Frank Rudzicz of the department of computer science, Toronto Rehabilitation Institute - UHN and Vector Institute for Artificial Intelligence for 鈥淎utomatic assessment of dementia from speech.鈥
     
  • David Steinman of the department of mechanical and industrial engineering for 鈥淎 real-time, dynamic ultrasound simulator incorporating tissue motion and deformation.鈥
     
  • Yu Sun of the department of mechanical and industrial engineering for 鈥淎 novel system for non-invasive selection of single spermatozoa with high DNA integrity for clinical in vitro fertilization (IVF).鈥 
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