New Approaches to Plasma Therapy may Improve Medical Implant Outcomes
News and Events
- Ulysses scheme funds 14 Ireland and France-based research collaborations
- CEA Strategy for Research, Innovation & Impact Launch Event
- Minister Lawless announces €2.5million for 28 Research Ireland industry-focused fellowships
- EIRSAT-1 wins UCD Research Impact Competition for transforming national space landscape
- Archives
- 2024 News Archive
- 2023 News Archive
- 2022 News Archive
- Arup Scholarship Presentation 2022
- UCD wins Higher Education Partnership of the Year Award at the Asia Matters Business Awards
- Dr Amiya Pandit wins the Thomas Mitchell Medal
- Prestigious award for UCD team tackling stillbirth prevention
- Major milestone on Ireland’s journey into space
- RIBA Stirling Prize 2022
- University College Dublin Engineering Spin-out Shortlisted for Ireland Leg of the 2022 KPMG Global Tech Innovator Competition
- Irish Government invests in 47 projects to engage and inspire the public about STEM
- Irish-led international education project to grow understanding of the bioeconomy in society
- €16m energy system research partnership to decarbonise energy sector
- UCD spin-out PlasmaBound completes €2.35m funding round
- Home retrofits may need to be re-done in ten years, Oireachtas committee hears
- Unprecedented success for UCD in ERC Advanced Grant 2021 competition
- Visiting Professor announcement
- Research to Literally Get Under the Skin of Things
- Six UCD researchers awarded SFI Industry RD&I Fellowships
- University College Dublin and Queen’s University Belfast to Strengthen Collaboration
- UCD Engineers Among NovaUCD’s 2022 Innovation Awardees
- New Approaches may Uncover How the Brain Forms Decisions
- Serendipity Swings Doors of Opportunity Open Wide for Nanobubble Generator Developers
- Making Building on Sand a Realistic Option
- €9M joint investment for US-Ireland R&D Programme
- New Approaches to Plasma Therapy may Improve Medical Implant Outcomes
- Assessing Flood Risk Awareness Contributes to Environmental Policy Formation
- International Women's Day
- Supporting Climate Action Through Tree Planting recognised in UCD Research Impact Competition
- Helping People Understand and Mitigate the Spread of Aerosol-Born Infections
- Research that Directly Addresses the Climate Crisis
- Research teams chosen to find disruptive ideas for Irish Defence Forces
- Pan-European 'supergrid' could cut 32% from energy costs, says new UCD study
- Gas Hydrates – a Potential New Fuel Source or a Cause of Mass Extinctions
- Springer publishes book to mark retirement of Emeritus Professor Mohamed Al-Rubeai
- Strategies to Keep the Taps Running, Whatever Happens
- Shining the Food Safety Spotlight on Viral Contamination in Food
- Empowering People to Address the Problems of Climate Change
- AgTechUCD Announces Winners of Inaugural Accelerator Programme for AgTech and FoodTech Start-ups
- 2021 News Archive
- 2020 News Archive
- 2019 News Archive
- 2018 News Archive
- 2017 News Archive
- 2016 News Archive
- Building the State
- A Centenary Celebration
New Approaches to Plasma Therapy may Improve Medical Implant Outcomes
Monday, 14 March, 2022

Professor Paula Bourke of the UCD School of Biosystems & Food Engineering, Photo by Ste Murray
The race is on to find new and effective ways of treating antimicrobial resistant pathogens, which represent a major threat to the health of patients undergoing surgery for medical implants. Bacterial infection is one of the most common problems associated with such surgery, compounded by the absence of new antibiotics to take up the battle. But a tripartite team involving researchers at UCD and QUB and at Jefferson University in Philadelphia are pioneering new approaches.
Plasma is the fourth state of matter (the others are solid, liquid and gas. The researchers are using a combination of the direct application of cold plasma and plasma functionalised liquids. Liquids such as water or saline, can be exposed to a plasma in order to generate particular chemical characteristics, and are under investigation for a range of applications including infection control and cancer therapy. Although still in its early days, if the research is successful it could revolutionise outcomes, vastly improving the quality of life for hundreds of thousands of people each year and providing a new tool in the ongoing battle against antibiotic resistant microorganisms.
“The use of plasma is quite promising because it does not rely on one particular mechanism of action. So understanding how to best use the different disruptive mechanisms is what we hope to achieve.”
You can read the full case study here: New Approaches to Plasma Therapy may Improve Medical Implant Outcomes