Singapore engineers invented an ultrasound device that heals broken bones in half the normal healing time. A team at Nanyang Technological University developed a wearable, low-intensity pulsed ultrasound (LIPUS) device — no larger than a bandage — that delivers precisely calibrated sound waves to fracture sites, accelerating bone regeneration by stimulating osteoblast activity, enhancing blood vessel formation, and modulating inflammation. Clinical trials showed healing times reduced by forty to fifty-five percent across various fracture types.
Bone healing is a complex, multi-stage process: inflammation clears debris, a soft callus of cartilage bridges the gap, osteoblasts convert cartilage to bone, and remodeling restores original architecture. Each stage is influenced by mechanical signals — bones are exquisitely sensitive to physical forces. The NTU device exploits this by sending low-frequency ultrasound pulses (1.5 MHz at 30 milliwatts per square centimeter) through the skin to the fracture site for twenty minutes daily. These mechanical microvibrations upregulate gene expression in osteoblasts, increase local production of bone morphogenetic proteins, and stimulate angiogenesis — new blood vessel growth that delivers nutrients to the healing site.
In a randomized trial across three Singapore hospitals, patients with tibial shaft fractures who used the device healed in an average of eleven weeks compared to twenty weeks in the control group. Radiographic union was confirmed independently by blinded assessors. Pain scores were also significantly lower in the treatment group, likely due to faster resolution of the inflammatory phase.
The device's wearability is key to its impact. Previous ultrasound bone-healing machines were bulky and clinic-bound. The NTU version adheres directly to skin, is battery-powered, and can be worn under clothing during daily activities. For elderly patients with osteoporotic fractures, athletes with stress fractures, and developing countries where prolonged immobilization is economically devastating, a sound-wave bandage that cuts healing time in half could reshape orthopedic care globally. Healing has never sounded this good. 
Source: Nanyang Technological University, The Lancet Digital Health 2025 #BoneHealing #Ultrasound #LIPUS #OrthopedicInnovation #FractureTreatment #WearableMedTech