DocumentCode
2354209
Title
Microneedles array for fluid extraction and drug delivery
Author
Liu, Ran ; Wang, Xiaohao ; Zhou, Zhaoying ; Williams, John D.
Author_Institution
Dept. of Precision Instruments & Mechanology, Tsinghua Univ., Beijing, China
fYear
2003
fDate
19-22 Oct. 2003
Firstpage
239
Lastpage
244
Abstract
Micro electro-mechanical systems (MEMS) are rapidly growing area of interest for a broad spectrum of applications. One particularly fast-growing area is biomedical applications for micromachining technologies. One application of interest to the biomedical industry is the development of microneedles. MEMS technology brings new means for biomedical field. The design and fabrication of the microneedle array for fluid extraction or drug delivery are presented in this paper. The hollow SU-8 microneedle array is fabricated on a glass substrate, by UV-LIGA techniques. The fabricated hollow microneedles is 300 μm in length and 80 μm in diameter. The microneedle provide novel biomedical analyzing method with efficiency, safety and no pain to the human skin. The microneedle array, which may be built with no-board fluid pumps, have potential applications in the chemical and biomedical fields for localized chemical analysis, programmable drug-delivery systems, and very small, precise fluids sampling.
Keywords
LIGA; drug delivery systems; micromachining; micromechanical devices; skin; 300 mum; 80 mum; MEMS technology; UV-LIGA techniques; biomedical applications; biomedical industry; drug delivery; fluid extraction; fluids sampling; glass substrate; hollow SU-8 microneedle array; hollow microneedles; human skin; localized chemical analysis; micro electro-mechanical systems technology; micromachining technologies; microneedles array design; microneedles array fabrication; no-board fluid pumps; programmable drug-delivery systems; Chemical analysis; Drug delivery; Fabrication; Glass; Humans; Micromachining; Micromechanical devices; Pain; Pharmaceutical technology; Safety;
fLanguage
English
Publisher
ieee
Conference_Titel
Micromechatronics and Human Science, 2003. MHS 2003. Proceedings of 2003 International Symposium on
Print_ISBN
0-7803-8165-3
Type
conf
DOI
10.1109/MHS.2003.1249939
Filename
1249939
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