Patent number: 6387977
Abstract: An impoved barrier or drug delivery system which is highly adherent to the surface to which it is applied is disclosed, along with methods for making the barrier. In the preferred embodiment, tissue is stained with a photoinitiator, then the polymer solution or gel having added thereto a defined amount of the same or a different photoinitiator is applied to the tissue. On exposure to light, the resulting system polymerizes at the surface, giving excellent adherence, and also forms a gel in the rest of the applied volume. Thus a gel barrier of arbitrary thickness can be applied to a surface while maintaining high adherence at the interface. This process is referred to herein as “priming”. The polymerizable barrier materials are highly useful for sealing tissue surfaces and junctions against leaks of fluids. In another embodiment, “priming” can be used to reliably adhere preformed barriers to tissue or other surfaces, or to adhere tissue surfaces to each other.
Type:
Grant
Filed:
July 14, 2000
Date of Patent:
May 14, 2002
Assignees:
Focal, Inc., Board of Regents, The University of Texas System
Inventors:
Amarpreet S. Sawhney, David A. Melanson, Chandrashekar P. Pathak, Jeffrey A. Hubbell, Luis Z. Avila, Mark T. Kieras, Stephen D. Goodrich, Shikha P. Barman, Arthur J. Coury, Ronald S. Rudowsky, Douglas J. K. Weaver, Marc A. Levine, John C. Spiridigliozzi, Thomas S. Bromander, Dean M. Pichon, George Selecman, David J. Nedder, Bradley C. Poff, Donald L. Elbert
Patent number: 6121341
Abstract: An impoved barrier or drug delivery system which is highly adherent to the surface to which it is applied is disclosed, along with methods for making the barrier. In the preferred embodiment, tissue is stained with a photoinitiator, then the polymer solution or gel having added thereto a defined amount of the same or a different photoinitiator is applied to the tissue. On exposure to light, the resulting system polymerizes at the surface, giving excellent adherence, and also forms a gel in the rest of the applied volume. Thus a gel barrier of arbitrary thickness can be applied to a surface while maintaining high adherence at the interface. This process is referred to herein as "priming". the polymerizable barrier materials are highly useful for sealing tissue surfaces and junctions against leaks of fluids. In another embodiment, "priming" can be used to reliably adhere preformed barriers to tissue or other surfaces, or to adhere tissue surfaces to each other.
Type:
Grant
Filed:
October 10, 1997
Date of Patent:
September 19, 2000
Assignees:
Board of Regents, The University of Texas System, Focal, Inc.
Inventors:
Amarpreet S. Sawhney, David A. Melanson, Chandrashekar P. Pathak, Jeffrey A. Hubbell, Luis Z. Avila, Mark T. Kieras, Stephen D. Goodrich, Shikha P. Barman, Arthur J. Coury, Ronald S. Rudowsky, Douglas J. K. Weaver, Marc A. Levine, John C. Spiridigliozzi, Thomas S. Bromander, Dean M. Pichon, George Selecman, David J. Nedder, Bradley C. Poff, Donald L. Elbert