
 		 		 			Mosquito needle helps take sting out of injections 		 		
 		         	 	  	  	             		   	               	                   		  	     	                                                    LOOK away now if you are afraid of  needles. A motorised, harpoon-like needle sounds painful, but in fact  hurts far less than a regular injection because it resembles a  mosquito's mouth parts.
                                		  	     	                                                    Seiji Aoyagi and colleagues at Kansai  University in Osaka, Japan, have developed a needle that mimics a  mosquito's proboscis, which is serrated and barely touches the skin so  you don't feel the initial bite. A smooth hypodermic, on the other hand,  leaves a lot of metal in contact with the skin, stimulating the nerves  and causing pain.
                                		  	     	                                                    Aoyagi hopes his design could help  diabetic people who have to take blood samples. Etched from silicon, the  needle imitates three of the creature's seven mobile mouthparts: the  two serrated maxillae and the tubular labrum (see diagram).
                                		  	     	                                       Unlike Aoyagi's previous attempts to mimic a mosquito's bite, each of these parts is driven by tiny motors  based on lead zirconium titanate (PZT) - a piezoelectric crystal that  expands very slightly when you apply an alternating voltage (Sensors  and Actuators). The vibrations  of the crystal can be used as a simple motor to control how the needle  enters the skin.
                                             		  	     	                                                    The sections of the needle break the  skin in the same sequence as they do with a mosquito, vibrating at about  15 hertz to ease it into the skin - as observed in mosquitoes under  high-speed video microscopes. Aoyagi has tested his needle on himself  and three volunteers, who agree that the pain is much reduced but lasts  longer than with a conventional syringe. He thinks that by mimicking  more of the creature's mouthparts, including an addition to steady the  needle's entry, he'll be able to reduce that dull pain.
                                		  	     	                                                    Microfluidics engineer Suman  Chakraborty of the Indian Institute of Technology in Kharagpur, who has  also worked on similar designs in the past, is impressed by Aoyagi's  progress. "It's a substantial move towards improving the technology," he  says.