The challenge with transporting live cells for stem cell therapies on a plane is two-fold.
The cells need to be constantly agitated so that they don't clump together and lose their medical properties.
The US Federal Aviation Administration (FAA) doesn't allow packages with running electronics on air-planes - so a standard device driven by motors is not an option for transport, researchers said.
The team at the Jacobs School of Engineering at the University of California, San Diego built a device inspired by a mechanical clock, which is spring-driven and can house and agitate tubes of stem cells during shipping without use of electronics.
Also Read
The springs drive a gearbox that in turn rotates the vials where the stem cells are stored via a timing belt. The device rotates eight times per minute.
The students developed a working prototype, but some fine tuning remains to reduce system friction.
"This device has the potential to revolutionise the cell therapy industry," said Dr Noelia Kunzevitzky who sponsored the project along with Dr Jeffrey Goldberg, professor and director of research at the UC San Diego Shiley Eye Center.
"This could then drive down prices for cell therapies, making them more readily available for treatment of diseases such as glaucoma and macular degeneration, for example," said Kunzevitzky.