3 April 2011 - Nanotechnology & Medicine-Dina Khater

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Nanotechnology and medicine

Dina Khater – 3 April 2011 - SFC


Nanotechnology
 Nano is 1×10−9 m.

 Nanotechnology deals with structures


with a size range of 1 to 100 nm.

 It`s based upon molecular self-


assembly
Nanotechnology
Nanotechnology
 AT the nano level materials begin to
demonstrate entirely new chemical
and physical properties.

 Materials can be stronger, lighter and


highly soluble , reducing of melting
point ……
Nanotechnology

 BY manipulating the arrangement of


atoms nanotechnology may be able
to create many new materials and
devices .
Nanotechnology
Nanotechnology has several
application on many fields such as :
o Medicine
o Electronics
o Energy production
o water processing ………
Nanomedicine
It is the medical application of•
.nanotechnology

It`s defined as the repair,•


construction and control of human
biological systems using devices
built upon nanotechnology
.standards
Nanomedicine
Nanostructured •
materials, engineered
enzymes and many
other products of
biotechnology will be
very useful in the
.future

High-sophisticated,•
medically
programmable
nanomachines and
nanorobots are
.developed
Nanomedicine
 That will allow
doctors to approach
the human body at
the cellular and
molecular levels.
Interventions such
as repairing
damaged tissues
(bone, muscle,
nerve) will be
possible.
Nanomedicine
 Nanomedicine is a huge industry.

 Sales reached 6.8 billion dollars in


2004. USA and European Union are
investing billions of dollars and plan
to invest more in the future.
Nanomedicine
 Nanotechnology can be used in many
fields of medicine
•Pharmacy
•visualization
•cancer
•Diagnoses
•surgery
Nanopharmacy
 It can help in increasing the
bioavailability of the drug and
biodistributions .

 So it will reduce side effects .

 It can icrease the solubility of the


drug.
Nanopharmacy
 It can help giving suspensions as IV
injection.
Nanopharmacy

 Nanostructures have large surface


area which means more room for
functional groups which can bind with
tumor cells.
Nanopharmacy
 the biodistribution of these
nanoparticles is mostly unknown due
to the difficulty in targeting specific
organs in the body.

 In mice, gold selectively targeted


certain organs based on their size and
charge.
Nanopharmacy
 Positively-charged gold nanoparticles were
found to enter the kidneys .

 negatively-charged gold nanoparticles


remained in the liver and spleen.

 The nanoshells can be targeted to bond to


cancerous cells by conjugating antibodies
or peptides to the nanoshell surface.
Nanomedicine and cancer

 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.
photodynamic therapy
 If the particle is metal, energy from
the 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).
photodynamic therapy
 Unlike chemotherapy it does not
leave a “toxic trail”
Surgery

 This could solve the difficulties and


blood leaks caused when the surgeon
tries to re-stitch the arteries that
have been cut during a kidney or
heart transplant. The flesh welder
could weld the artery perfectly
Surgery
 Nanoparticles of cadmium selenide
(quantum dots) glow when exposed
to ultraviolet light. When injected,
they seep into cancer tumors. The
surgeon can see the glowing tumor,
and use it as a guide for more
accurate tumor removal.
References
 http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nanome
dicine#cite_note-6

 http://www.nanoed.org/concepts_ap
ps/AuNanoShells/InDepthIntroPg1.ht
ml#InDepthIntro

 http://www.nanomedicinecenter.com
/drug-delivery/
Thanks
Thanks
Dina Nabil Khater
[email protected]
:Supervised by prof. Doctor
Wael Sami
Industrial pharmacy department
SPC supervisor
 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.

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