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Showing posts with label nanomedicine. Show all posts
Showing posts with label nanomedicine. Show all posts

2010-02-05

Doctors tout NanoKnife for easy tumor removal

From PhysOrg.com:

A University of Miami doctor recently removed two cancerous tumors from a patient's liver using only three needle-like probes, a computer and a powerful burst of electricity
Full article


2009-11-06

Magnetic nanoparticles to simultaneously diagnose, monitor and treat

From PhysOrg.com:

Whether it's magnetic nanoparticles (mNPs) giving an army of 'therapeutically armed' white blood cells direction to invade a deadly tumour's territory, or the use of mNPs to target specific nerve channels and induce nerve-led behaviour (such as the life-dependant thumping of our hearts), mNPs have come a long way in the past decade.
Full article


2009-06-29

Nanoscale 'Fountain Pen' Draws Therapeutic Nanodiamonds

From PhyOrg.com:

A research team at Northwestern University has developed a tool that can precisely deliver tiny doses of drug-carrying nanomaterials to individual cells. The tool, called the nanofountain probe, functions in two different ways. In one mode, the probe acts like a fountain pen with drug-coated nanodiamonds serving as the ink, allowing researchers to create devices by “writing” with it. The second mode functions as a single-cell syringe, permitting direct injection of biomolecules or chemicals into individual cells. The research was led by Horacio Dante Espinosa, Ph.D., and Dean Ho, Ph.D., and the results appear in the journal Small.
Full article


2008-11-11

New laser method reproduces art masterworks to protein patterns


New laser method reproduces art masterworks to protein patterns from PhysOrg.com

Canadian researchers have created a new protein patterning technique that's enabled them to reproduce complex cellular environments and a miniature version of a masterpiece painting. According to a new study published in the journal Lab on a Chip, scientists from Université de Montréal, the Maisonneuve-Rosemont Hospital Research Centre, McGill University and the Montreal Neurological Institute have developed a laser technology that can mimic the protein patterns that surround cells in vivo and that could lead to great advances in neuroscience.

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2008-04-01

UCLA researchers design nanomachine that kills cancer cells


UCLA researchers design nanomachine that kills cancer cells from PhysOrg.com

Researchers from the Nano Machine Center at the California NanoSystems Institute at UCLA have developed a novel type of nanomachine that can capture and store anticancer drugs inside tiny pores and release them into cancer cells in response to light. Known as a "nanoimpeller," the device is the first light-powered nanomachine that operates inside a living cell, a development that has strong implications for cancer treatment.

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