Use of Gold in Surgical Applications

Topics Covered
Overview Gold-Plated Stents Current Medical Applications of Gold Applications
of Gold in Implants
Overview
Gold is
used in a number of surgical applications including a new treatment for prostate
cancer that uses grains of gold, approximately the size of a grain of rice. The surgical
procedure involves inserting three gold grains
into the prostate using ultrasound. The position of the gold grains can
be detected using x-rays (gold is opaque to x-rays) allowing the doctors to accurately
target the prostate position within one or two millimetres.
Gold-Plated Stents
Gold-plating has a history of use in the coating of coronary
stents. Inserted inside large arteries and veins, these implants act like
scaffolding, propping up the blood vessels and keeping them open to allow
adequate blood flow. Boston Scientific produced the NiroyalTM stent
as one of the first gold-plated stents in 2001, largely in response to the need for
stents that could be more accurately placed.
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The radiopacity of gold means that gold-plated
stents offer the best visibility under an x-ray enabling them to be positioned
where the surgeon wants them. The biological inertness of gold is
important in this application and according to at least one published study by
Tanigawa et al, [ N Tanigawa, S Sawada and M Kobayah, Reaction to the Aortic
Wall to Six Metallic Stent Materials, Acada. Radio.2:379-384] gold-plated
stents were found to produce the fewest macroscopic changes in surrounding
intravascular tissue.
Current Medical Applications of Gold
Gold of
high purity (typically 99.99%) is used as an implant material in the upper
eyelid for the treatment of facial nerve paralysis. The aim of this treatment is
to allow the patient’s upper eyelids to close where paralysis of the eyelid
muscles is preventing this motion. Following the implantation of the gold device
(typically a few grams in weight), the closing is produced by the gravitational
pull on the implant.
Applications of Gold in Implants
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Gold is
also widely used in implants for drainage and aeration of the middle ear (the
tympanic cavity). In treating the condition commonly known as ‘glue ear’ it is
sometimes necessary to implant a medical device that has a high infection
resistance and low susceptibility to incrustation. It has been established that
gold fulfils
these requirements, showing a high degree of resistance to bacterial
colonisation in the ear and a range of gold prostheses
are commercially available in high purity gold for this
application.
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Source: World Gold Council
For more information on this source please visit World Gold
Council
Date Added: Oct 27, 2009
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