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| Leeches, new and improved | ||||||||||
| After being discounted as quackery for almost a century, leeches have arrived back on the medical scene as powerful aids to treat venous congestion following surgery (Todays Chemist at Work, Oct 2001, pp 4748). Unfortunately, leeches come with a host of limitations that curb their usefulness, including a restricted feeding capacity (15 mL per blood meal), a shallow reach into the skin (only to the first network of surface blood vessels), and a lack of sterility that can cause bacterial infections.
The mechanical leech can reach deeper into the skin to access a larger network of blood vessels. It is also insatiablethe current model consistently collects about 10 mL of blood per hour. However, it is not without drawbacks. According to Conforti, a real leech has two possible advantages over its mechanical counterpart: size and cost. Confortis group is currently working to shrink the 1.5 × 2 cm patient interface unit so it can fit into the tiniest places needing therapy for venous congestion. Although a price has not been named, Conforti expects the disposable parts to run in the hundreds of dollars and the patient interface unit to cost thousands. The cost might well be worth itbecause real leech therapy can cost $350 per day, says Conforti, a mechanical leech would pay for itself in just a few uses. |
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