Nanomedicine
Nanomedicine
Nanomedicine
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Nanomedicine
Molecular self-assembly
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K. Eric Drexler
Engines of Creation
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Contents
[hide]
1 Introduction
2 Drug Delivery
3 Cancer
4 Surgery
5 In vivo/ Therapy
6 Nanorobots
7 Neuro-electronic Interfaces
8 Cell repair machines
9 External links
10 See also
11 References
[edit] Introduction
In the near future, advancement in nanomedicine will deliver a valuable set of research
tools and clinically helpful devices. The National Nanotechnology Initiative expects new
commercial applications in the pharmaceutical industry that will include advanced drug
delivery systems, new therapies, and in vivo imaging. Farther down the line, neuro-
electronic interfaces and cell repair machines could revolutionize medicine and the
medical field, but now nanomedicine is becoming one of the biggest industries in the
world. In 2004, nanomedicine sales reached 6.8 billion dollars, and with over 200
companies and 38 products worldwide, a minimum of 3.8 billion dollars in
nanotechnology R&D is being invested every year. As the nanomedicine industry
continues to grow, there is no doubt that it will have a significant impact on the economy.
The most important innovations are taking place in drug delivery which involves
developing nanoscale particles or molecules to improve bioavailability. Bioavailability
refers to the presence of drug molecules where they are needed in the body and where
they will do the most good. Drug delivery focuses on maximizing bioavailability both at
specific places in the body and over a period of time. Over 65 billion dollars is wasted
every year because of poor bioavailability. In vivo imaging is another area where tools
and devices are being developed. Using nanoparticle contrast agents, images such as
ultrasound and MRI have a favorable distribution and improved contrast. The new
therapies and surgeries that are being developed might be effective in treating illnesses
and diseases such as cancer. Finally, a shift from the possible to the potential will be
made when nanorobots such as neuro-electronic interfaces and cell repair machines are
discussed.
[edit] Cancer
A schematic illustration showing how nanoparticles or other other cancer drugs might be
used to treat cancer.
Sensor test chips containing thousands of nanowires, able to detect proteins and other
biomarkers left behind by cancer cells, could enable the detection and diagnosis of cancer
in the early stages from a few drops of a patient's blood. [1]
Researchers at Rice University under Prof. Jennifer West, have demonstrated the use of
120nm diameter nanoshells coated with gold to kill cancer tumors in mice. The
nanoshells can be targeted to bond to cancerous cells by conjugating antibodies or
peptides to the nanoshell surface. By irradiating the area of the tumor with an infrared
laser, which passes through flesh without heating it, the gold is heated sufficiently to
cause death to the cancer cells [2].
One scientist, University of Michigan’s James Baker, believes he has discovered a highly
efficient and successful way of delivering cancer-treatment drugs that is less harmful to
the surrounding body. Baker has developed a nanotechnology that can locate and then
eliminate cancerous cells. He looks at a molecule called a dendrimer. This molecule has
over a hundred hooks on it that allow it to attach to cells in the body for a variety of
purposes. Baker then attaches folic-acid to a few of the hooks (folic-acid, being a
vitamin, is received by cells in the body). Cancer cells have more vitamin receptors than
normal cells, so Baker's vitamin-laden dendrimer will be absorbed by the cancer cell. To
the rest of the hooks on the dendrimer, Baker places anti-cancer drugs that will be
absorbed with the dendrimer into the cancer cell, thereby delivering the cancer drug to
the cancer cell and nowhere else (Bullis 2006).
[edit] Surgery
At Rice University, a flesh welder is used to fuse two pieces of chicken meat into a single
piece. The two pieces of chicken are placed together touching. A greenish liquid
containing gold-coated nanoshells is dribbled along the seam. An infrared laser is traced
along the seam, causing the two sides to weld together. This could solve the difficulties
and blood leaks caused when the surgeon tries to restitch the arteries he/she has cut
during a kidney or heart transplant. The flesh welder could meld the artery into a perfect
seal.
In photodynamic therapy, a particle is placed within the body and is illuminated with
light from the outside. The light gets absorbed by the particle and if the particle is metal,
energy from the light will heat the particle and surrounding tissue. Light may also be used
to produce high energy oxygen molecules which will chemically react with and destroy
most organic molecules that are next to them (like tumors). This therapy is appealing for
many reasons. It does not leave a “toxic trail” of reactive molecules throughout the body
(chemotherapy) because it is directed where only the light is shined and the particles
exist. Photodynamic therapy has potential for a noninvasive procedure for dealing with
diseases, growths, and tumors.
[edit] Nanorobots
The somewhat speculative claims about the possibility of using nanorobots [2] [3] in
medicine, advocates say, would totally change the world of medicine once it is realized.
Nanomedicine [4] [5] would make use of these nanorobots, introduced into the body, to
repair or detect damages and infections. According to Robert Freitas of the Institute for
Molecular Manufacturing, a typical blood borne medical nanorobot would be between
0.5-3 micrometres in size, because that is the maximum size possible due to capillary
passage requirement. Carbon would be the primary element used to build these
nanorobots due to the inherent strength and other characteristics of some forms of carbon
(diamond/fullerene composites), and nanorobots would be fabricated in desktop
nanofactories [6] specialized for this purpose. Cancer could be treated very effectively,
according to nanomedicine advocates. Nanorobots could counter the problem of
identifying and isolating cancer cells as they could be introduced into the bloodstream.
These nanorobots would search out cancer affected cells using certain molecular markers.
Medical nanorobots would then destroy these cells, and only these cells. Nanomedicines
could be a very helpful and hopeful therapy for patients, since current treatments like
radiation therapy and chemotherapy often end up destroying more healthy cells than
cancerous ones. From this point of view, it provides a non-depressed therapy for cancer
patients. Nanorobots could also be useful in precision tissue- and cell-targeted drug
delivery [7] [8], in performing nanosurgery [9], and in treatments for hypoxemia and
respiratory illness[10] [11], dentistry [12] [13], bacteremic infections[14], physical
trauma [15], gene therapy via chromosome replacement therapy [16] [17], and even
biological aging [18].
One limitation to this innovation is the fact that electrical interference is a possibility.
Electric fields, EMP pulses, and stray fields from other in vivo electrical devices can all
cause interference. Also, thick insulators are required to prevent electron leakage, and if
high conductivity of the in vivo medium occurs there is a risk of sudden power loss and
“shorting out.” Finally, thick wires are also needed to conduct substantial power levels
without overheating. Little practical progress has been made even though research is
happening. The wiring of the structure is extremely difficult because they must be
positioned precisely in the nervous system so that it is able to monitor and respond to
nervous signals. The structures that will provide the interface must also be compatible
with the body’s immune system so that they will remain unaffected in the body for a long
time. In addition, the structures must also sense ionic currents and be able to cause
currents to flow backward. While the potential for these structures is amazing, there is no
timetable for when they will be available.
The possibilities of these cell repair machines are impressive. Comparable to the size of
viruses or bacteria, their compact parts will allow them to be more complex. The early
machines will be specialized. As they open and close cell membranes or travel through
tissue and enter cells and viruses, machines will only be able to correct a single molecular
disorder like DNA damage or enzyme deficiency. Later, cell repair machines will be
programmed with more abilities with the help of advanced AI systems.
Nanocomputers will be needed to guide these machines. These computers will direct
machines to examine, take apart, and rebuild damaged molecular structures. Repair
machines will be able to repair whole cells by working structure by structure. Then by
working cell by cell and tissue by tissue, whole organs can be repaired. Finally, by
working organ by organ, health is restored to the body. Cells damaged to the point of
inactivity can be repaired because of the ability of molecular machines to build cells from
scratch. Therefore, cell repair machines will free medicine from reliance on self repair.
A new wave of technology and medicine is being created and its impact on the world is
going to be monumental. From the possible applications such as drug delivery and in
vivo imaging to the potential machines of the future, advancements in nanomedicine are
being made every day. It will not be long for the 10 billion dollar industry to explode into
a 100 billion or 1 trillion dollar industry, and drug delivery, in vivo imaging and therapy
is just the beginning.
[edit] External links
Nanomedicine
The International Journal of Nanomedicine
Advanced Drug Delivery Reviews Volume 56, Issue 11, Pages 1527-1692 (22
September 2004) Intelligent Therapeutics: Biomimetic Systems and
Nanotechnology in Drug Delivery
Nanomedicine website
Foresight Institute
Nanomedicine Art Gallery
General review of medical nanorobotics (non-technical)
General review of nanomedicine (technical)
Nanomedicine: Nanotechnology, Biology and Medicine
Forward Look Report on Nanomedicine published by the European Science
Foundation
Impact of Nanotechnology on Biomedical Sciences
Nanomedicine Laboratory
Michigan Nanotechnology Institute for Medicine and Biological Sciences
Companies and institutions involved in Nanomedicine
Institute for NanoBioTechnology at Johns Hopkins University
Nanobiomagnetics
[edit] References
Reviews in the journal Nanomedicine
National Geographic magazine June 2006
Nanotechnology:The future in Medicine 2006 by Rahul Shetty M.D. ISBN 0-
9781573-0-3
Nanomedicine, Volume I: Basic Capabilities 1999 by Robert A. Freitas Jr. ISBN-
10: 157059645X (hardcover) ISBN-10: 1570596808 (softcover) [19]
Nanomedicine, Volume IIA: Biocompatibility 2003 by Robert A. Freitas Jr.
ISBN-10: 1570597006 [20]
Engines of Creation: The Coming Era of Nanotechnology 1986 by K. Eric
Drexler ISBN-10: 0385199732
Nanotechnology: A Gentle Introduction to the Next Big Idea 2003 by Daniel
Ratner and Mark Ratner ISBN-10: 0131014005
Langar, Robert, David A. LaVan, Terry McGuire. “Small-scale systems for in
vivo drug delivery.” Nature Biotechnology Oct. 2006: 1184-1191.
Bock, Anne-Katrin, Anwyn Dullaart, Volker Wagner, Axel Zweck. “The
emerging nanomedicine landscape.” Nature Biotechnology Oct. 2003: 1211-1217.
Freitas, Robert A., Jr., “What is Nanomedicine?” Nanomedicine: Nanotech. Biol.
Med. 1(March 2005):2-9. [21][22]
Allen, Theresa M, and Peter R. Cullis. “Drug Delivery Systems: Entering the
Mainstream.” Science 303 (2004): 1818-1822.
Bullis, Kevin (Mar/Apr 2006). "Nanomedicine". Technology Review 109 (1): 58-
59. Retrieved on 12/10/06.
(4/19/2004) "Nanoshells destroy tumors in mice". Chemical & Engineering News
82 (16): 35. Retrieved on 12/19/06.
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