Mumbai: Soon you can be spared from the inconvenience, there are a few tablets or a repeat injection. Instead, the drug can be remote controlled to not pursue directly into the body through a small embedded chip. This implantable device is successfully tested for the first time in human trials, where researchers used it to manage the daily dose
, usually by injection. The device was tested on a group of women suffering from osteoporosis by means of wireless communication that do drugs at regular intervals in the body. Advertised as a "pharmacy-it-chip", it can become a breakthrough in the treatment of patients suffering from chronic diseases like diabetes, heart disease and, and, where necessary to take several medications and frequent injections. The chip can be filled with different drugs for the treatment of long-term chronic diseases, and set to automatically do without them, experts say. Addressing TOY, Robert Farra, President lasix drug reactions and CEO
- company's implantable drug delivery device, and the study's lead author, said: "The microchip is well suited for potent drugs. Diseases treated include osteoporosis, multiple sclerosis and acute conditions such as treatment after a heart attack. "
Indian doctors welcome development as it will simplify treatment for people with critical conditions. The company plans to submit to the laws his first device, the microchip in 2014. .
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