NewsGerman-Korean cooperation in plasma medicine

German-Korean cooperation in plasma medicine

In the summer of 2016, the Applied Plasma Medicine Center was founded in the Korean capital Seoul, a joint project of scientists from the Leibniz Institute for Plasma Science and Technology (INP) and the Plasma Bioscience Research Institute of Kwangwoon University. Now, experts from both research locations are taking stock of their findings at an international workshop in Greifswald.

The Leibniz Institute for Plasma Science and Technology Greifswald (INP) and the Plasma Bioscience Research Institute of Kwangwoon University Seoul have combined their research activities to define common standards and diagnostics in plasma medicine. With the official opening of the Applied Plasma Medicine Center (APMC) in February 2017, this collaboration was institutionalized as part of the first APMC workshop. For the first time, a Leibniz Institute became a partner of a Korean excellence research program.

"We aim to harmonize the test methods for plasma devices and want to achieve comparable results," says the head of the research focus on plasma medicine at the INP, Prof. Thomas von Woedtke. "The goal is to establish an international standard for transferring plasma technologies worldwide to new applications in medicine."

In the first year since the inauguration of the APMC, researchers from INP Greifswald spent a total of 126 days in Seoul to test the different methods and devices. The data obtained in this research work should prepare the step into the clinical routine. "Approval procedures for medical products are as complex in Korea as they are in Germany," says Dr. Kai Masur, Head of the Plasma Wound Healing Research Group at ZIK plasmatis, an interdisciplinary research center at the INP. "We are honored to be able to accompany our Korean partners on this journey."

At a second workshop of the APMC on 22./23. March in the Biotechnikum Greifswald plasma researchers from both countries want to report on the results and successes so far. The event will take place after the International Workshop on Plasma for Cancer Treatment (IWPCT) in Greifswald. Around 120 scientists from 21 countries are expected.

Source: Leibniz Institute for Plasma Science and Technology (INP) / IDW News Editor Countries / organization: Korea, South Topic: Life Sciences Physical/Chemical Technologies

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