Research in
Earth and Life
Science
Submitted by:
Dejeuner G. Verdera
Submitted to:
Mrs. Arlene Abadilla
How Nanotechnology is
Changing the Future of
Medicine?
Nanotechnology in Medicine
Nanomedicine
The use of nanotechnology in medicine offers some exciting possibilities.
Some techniques are only imagined, while others are at various stages of testing,
or actually being used today.
Nanotechnology in medicine involves applications of nanoparticles
currently under development, as well as longer range research that involves the
use of manufactured nano-robots to make repairs at the cellular level (sometimes
referred to as nanomedicine).
Whatever you call it, the use of nanotechnology in the field of medicine
could revolutionize the way we detect and treat damage to the human body and
disease in the future, and many techniques only imagined a few years ago are
making remarkable progress towards becoming realities.
Nanotechnology in Medicine Application: Drug Delivery
One application of nanotechnology in medicine currently being developed
involves employing nanoparticles to deliver drugs, heat, light or other substances
to specific types of cells (such as cancer cells). Particles are engineered so that
they are attracted to diseased cells, which allows direct treatment of those cells.
This technique reduces damage to healthy cells in the body and allows for earlier
detection of disease.
For example, nanoparticles that deliver chemotherapy drugs directly to
cancer cells are under development. Tests are in progress for targeted delivery
of chemotherapy drugs and their final approval for their use with cancer patients
is pending.
Researchers at the Wyss Institue are testing nanoparticles that release
drugs when subjected to sheer force, such as occurs when passing through a
section of artery that is mostly blocked by a clot. Lab tests on animals have shown
that this method is effective in delivering drugs used to dissolve clots.
Researchers at the Houston Methodist Research Institute have
demonstrated a targeted that degrade inside a tumor, releasing polymer strands
that form a nanoparticle containing the drug to be delivered. This polymer
nanoparticle dissolves inside the cancer cell, delivering the drug to the cancer
cell.
Researchers at MIT are investigating the use of nanoparticles to deliver
vaccine.The nanoparticles protect the vaccine, allowing the vaccine time to
trigger a stronger immune response as shown in lab tests with mice. Additional
work needs to be done to adapt the technique to human patients.
Researchers are developing a method to release insulin that uses a sponge-
like matrix that contains insulin as well as nanocapsules containing an enzyme.
When the glucose level rises the nanocapsules release hydrogen ions, which bind
to the fibers making up the matrix. The hydrogen ions make the fibers positively
charged, repelling each other and creating openings in the matrix through which
insulin is released. So far this has been shown to be effective in tests with lab
mice.
Researchers are developing a nanoparticle that can be taken orally and
pass through the lining of the intestines into the bloodsteam. This should allow
drugs that must now be delivered with a shot to be taken in pill form. The
researchers have demonstrated the technique with lab mice so far.
Researchers are also developing a nanoparticle to defeat viruses. The
nanoparticle does not actually destroy viruses molecules, but delivers an enzyme
that prevents the reproduction of viruses molecules in the patients bloodstream.
The effectiveness of the technique has been demonstrated in lab tests.
Nanotechnology in Medicine Application: Therapy
Techniques
Researchers have developed "nanosponges" that absorb toxins and remove
them from the bloodstream. The nanosponges are polymer nanoparticles coated
with a red blood cell membrane. The red blood cell membrane allows the
nanosponges to travel freely in the bloodstream and attract the toxins.
Researchers have demonstrated a method to generate sound waves that
are powerful, but also tightly focused, that may eventually be used for
noninvasive surgery. They use a lens coated with carbon nanotubes to convert
light from a laser to focused sound waves. The intent is to develop a method that
could blast tumors or other diseased areas without damaging healthy tissue.
Researchers are investigating the use of bismuth nanoparticles to
concentrate radiation used in radiation therapy to treat cancer tumors. Initial
results indicate that the bismuth nanoparticles would increase the radiation dose
to the tumor by 90 percent.
Targeted heat therapy is being developed to destroy breast cancer tumors.
In this method antibodies that are strongly attracted to proteins produced in one
type of breast cancer cell are attached to nanotubes, causing the nanotubes to
accumulate at the tumor. Infrared light from a laser is absorbed by the nanotubes
and produces heat that incinerates the tumor.
Nanotechnology in Medicine Application: Diagnostic
Techniques
Another area in which nanotechnology has the potential to revolutionize
the medical field is in medical data collection. With nanotechnology, it is
possible to distribute nano-scale diagnostic devices throughout the body
that detect chemical changes as they happen. This may allow closer real-time
tracking of a patients health and status in ways that arent otherwise possible.
Outside the body, nanotechnology can also be used to speed up gene
sequencing and chemical analysis by using quantum dots attached to either
partial DNA sequences, or proteins that bond to other materials doctors are
interested in. Then, you can just look at the distribution of glowing elements to
see what was present in the sample.
This could potentially make it faster, cheaper, and more reliable to do
certain kinds of testing outside the body you could build tests that take a small
tissue sample and sequence it for pieces of the HIV genome, detecting infections
earlier and more reliably. Researchers at Stanford have used this technique
to look for damaged genes common in certain cancers, as a way to screen tumor
tissue faster:
Because qdots can track the presence of multiple molecules over an
extended period of time, researchers aim to use them to generate a kind of
optical barcode reflecting the levels of various tumor markers. The barcode could
indicate tumor type and stage.
In the long run, if nanotechnology developers can continue to miniaturize
the parts (or borrow techniques from microchip fabrication), they could build
simple microscopic cameras, smaller than the diameter of a capillary (10
microns, or about 100,000 atoms across). These cameras could map the entire
body, phoning home the results.
Nanotechnology in Medicine Application: Anti-Microbial
Techniques
Researchers at the University of Houston are developing a technique to kill
bacteria using gold nanoparticles and infrared light. This method may lead to
improved cleaning of instruments in hospital settings.
Researchers at the University of Colorado Boulder are investigating the use
of quantum dots to treat antibiotic resistant infections.
Researchers at the University of New South Wales are investigating the use
of polymer coated iron oxide nanoparticles to treat chronic bacterial infections.
One of the earliest nanomedicine applications was the use
of nanocrystalline silver which is as an antimicrobial agent for the treatment of
wounds, as discussed on the Nucryst Pharmaceuticals Corporation website.
A nanoparticle cream has been shown to fight staph infections.
The nanoparticles contain nitric oxide gas, which is known to kill bacteria.
Studies on mice have shown that using the nanoparticle cream to release nitric
oxide gas at the site of staph abscesses significantly reduced the infection.
Burn dressing that is coated with nanocapsules containing antibotics. If a
infection starts the harmful bacteria in the wound causes the nanocapsules to
break open, releasing the antibotics. This allows much quicker treatment of an
infection and reduces the number of times a dressing has to be changed.
A welcome idea in the early study stages is the elimination of bacterial
infections in a patient within minutes, instead of delivering treatment with
antibiotics over a period of weeks.
Nanotechnology in Medicine Application: Cell Repair
Nanorobots could actually be programmed to repair specific diseased cells,
functioning in a similar way to antibodies in our natural healing processes.
Nanotechnology and Neuroscience
Nanotechnology also has the potential to change how doctors treat brain
disorders. On the data-collection side of things, it may be possible to use nano-
scale diamond particles, which light up in response to the brains electrical
activity, to convert brain activity into frequencies of light that could escape the
skull and be registered by external sensors.
This would allow researchers to study the brain in much greater detail.
Being able to see exact patterns of brain activity would be helpful for ferreting
out the dynamics of seizures and mental illness in individual brains, allowing
for targeted interventions to solve the problem.
On the flip side, it may be possible to use carbon nanotubes to carry signals
to and from individual neurons. Right now, the technology is being applied by
Italian researchers to carrying electrical activity across dead brain tissue left
by strokes or infections, but it could also be used to make electrode grids that
are much finer and more bio-compatible than existing technology, allowing
for more sophisticated implants while doing less damage to the original tissue.
This could, in principle, operate at a much higher resolution and across a
broader scope than traditional implanted electrodes, allowing new kinds of brain
implants and brain stimulating devices. Even with the relatively crude electrode
implantation available today, the effects of brain stimulation are significant:
Conclusion:
Nanotechnology, as it advances, will have a profound impact on the human
condition, allowing us to repair cellular damage and treat a variety of human
afflictions in new and better ways, but it also brings with it a need for greater
understanding of the body systems that were tampering with, as well as an
appreciation of the ethics that go along with that.
Nanotechnology offers a way to direct interventions in the human body,
potentially on a level of individual cells, using smart operating elements that are
so small that they do not physically interfere with normal body function. Fine
fingers do less damage, and machines smaller than the finest capillary in the
body can go everywhere that blood goes.
If they can be made smart enough, such nanomedical devices can
judiciously choose where and how to intervene. Obviously, more will be
possible when engineers can build robots that have more sophisticated behaviors
(like the ability to move under their own power), but even relatively primitive
nanomachines of today have a lot of value.