Carbon Nanotubes Can Exist Safely Inside the Body, Help Treat Cancer 86
iandoh writes "A team of scientists at Stanford University has tracked the movement of carbon nanotubes through the digestive systems of mice. They've determined that the nanotubes do not exhibit any toxicity in the mice, and are safely expelled after delivering their payload. As a result, the study paves the way toward future applications of nanotubes in the treatment of illnesses. Previous research by the same team demonstrated that nanotubes can be used to fight cancer. The nanotubes do this in two ways. One method involves shining laser light on the nanotubes, which generates heat to destroy cancer cells. Another method involves attaching medicine to the nanotubes, which are able to accurately 'find' cancerous cells without impacting healthy cells."
non toxic on human gut (Score:2)
I don't know when the space elevator will be ready.
But from what I deduce from TFA, once the elevator is there, it will probably be edible !
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I don't know when the space elevator will be ready.
But from what I deduce from TFA, once the elevator is there, it will probably be edible !
*start super hero music* (Score:2, Funny)
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The good part is that CARBON NANO-TUBE MAN can probably withstand krypton. And paralysis for that matter.
It's about time (Score:3, Funny)
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Re:How common do you see this being? (Score:5, Insightful)
Every technology has to start somewhere. How many people 100 years ago would have thought it possible that the people of the future would have magic electric devices that allowed them to communicate through the air and all the way across the world? Small steps, small steps...
As a side note, the cancers that aren't curable aren't curable yet. I welcome anything that helps to move humanity free of cancer.
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The educated ones, certainly. Since Marconi made a transatlantic telegraph transmission in 1902. 106 years ago.
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Much like the scientists working on the nanotubes/people familiar with the technology do today?
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I submit, sir, that you are incorrect.
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The first trans-Atlantic radio transmission was in 1901. The telephone (considered an improved telegraph) was invented in the 1870's. I don't think any literate westerner from 1908 would be surprised by our wireless telephony. They'd be far more surprised by our d
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What exactly are you arguing then? That the form factor for a prop in a pulp 60's TV show demonstrates that people of the early 20th century had no idea that wireless communications were possible? Or was your comment just a complete non sequitur?
Voice over radio was first practiced i
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Oh, Wait...
Nevermind.
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Dr. Weir (Score:2, Funny)
Medical advances dont come from dump trucks.... (Score:2, Funny)
Commie Plot (Score:5, Funny)
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Before you mod the parent down, watch Dr. Strangelove.
-:sigma.SB
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Brain asplode (Score:2)
Shouldn't it be, "look less than gorgeous visually," or "sound less than gorgeous aurally?"
How does something sound visually? Is he on drugs? And if so, why isn't he sharing?
Excellent. (Score:1, Funny)
So if one day... (Score:2, Interesting)
Congratulations (Score:1)
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oh really? (Score:5, Informative)
What Dai (the Stanford professor) is actually claiming [pnas.org] is that specially functionalized nanotubes gather at the back end of the digestive tract, and seem to dissapear. Pure nanotubes cause all sorts of problems. There's an important distinction there, but this is still good news for nanotube (and cancer) research.
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So that's, um, good news...I guess? Thanks for sorting through all that mouse shit for us, Dai! Er, cancer doesn't stand a chance?
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Effects on lungs will be interesting (Score:5, Informative)
Normally, things go through the gut from one end (mouth) to the other (toilet seet) without much hassle, unless there's either a specific receptor or transporter for it (sugar), or it's chemical properties facilitates cross the gut wall (mainly : water can go around cell and hyrdophobic substance (fat) can go through the cell walls).
Nano tube aren't by definition neither water nor small fatty molecule, and as they're synthetic, the probability that some receptor will recognize and bind them is rather low.
Thus TFA seems plausible. But as you point out, not everyone agrees with those results. More research might be needed.
With lung, the situation is different :
Above a given threshold size (sorry, I did have to memorise it exactly for my medical studies but have since then forgotten), the respiratory tract function as some kind of "filter" and is able to stop them and reject them either back outside (by coughing) or to the gut (by swalloing), thank to the ciliated cells on the tract walls and associated mucus movement (which acts as some minature conveyor belt). (Except in smokers where the ciliated cells are paralyzed).
Under some threshold, smaller enough particles may manage to reach the end of the tract to the alveolar sacs.
Normally, specialised dust cells (some lung-specific kind of marcophage) will eat and digest them to destroy them.
Now the problems with nano tube is that they're not your usual microparticles : they're engineered to be indestructible, so the macrophage will have a hard time trying to destroy them.
This is what happens with asbestos, for exemple. Asbestos reaches the alveolar sas. Macrophage "eat it" but fail to digest it (asbestos fiber were made to be used as fire-resistant). Macrophage end up over-eating and exploding. Which releases the asbestos back and causes inflammation (both because the asbestos it self is irritant, and because of the macrophage breakage) in the lungs (asbestosis).
That's something we need to closely test with nanotube :
- are the size of most common nanotube construct under the threshold to reach the alveolar sacs ? (or will we, one day, mostly use nano technology to build huge nanobot - huge on the scale of dust particle, of course - that won't be able to reach the end of the respiratory tract).
- do animal studies show that dust cell somewhat manage to get rid of the tubes ? or do the tube accumulate and cause inflammation just like
Heat is versatile (Score:3, Interesting)
Type of nanotubes (Score:4, Interesting)
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You're kidding me right? (Score:5, Interesting)
Thank the inanimate carbon nanotube! Hooray! (Score:2)
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The Internets (Score:1)
whatcouldpossiblygowrong (Score:1)
targeting cancer cells is hard (Score:1)
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The real problem (Score:1, Interesting)
Bizarre overstatement: A *CURE* for Cancer? (Score:2)
Hongjie Dai, co-author of the study, had this to say about the study:
"One of the longstanding problems in medicine is how to cure cancer without harming normal body tissue."
I do not have a medical background, but what I know about cancer is that its causes are often rooted in any combination of lifetime exposure to carcinogens, dietary decisions, family history--you name it. In other words, people get cancer for reasons that can't possibly be addressed by running small tubes through their bodies.
Isn
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A cancer is by definition a cellular aberr
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Now, whether or not it's a 100% effective cure (i.e., always eradicates every cancerous cell of the current batch) is a different question. If you're hung up on that distinction, all I can say is that a total remission is as close to a cure as you ever get. That's a cure with a "but we may be wrong" rider attached.
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Like the other response to your post, I'm not sure If I agree with your terminology. Prevention is not the same as a cure. As the following statement would be incorrect usage of the word cure: I cured malaria by living in Antarctica.
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A cure is remedial treatment. Usually, it's used to mean a successful remedial treatment, or a means of restoring to health.
It's not necessary that a cure be able to prevent a disease, only that it be able to remove the disease. As such, once you have cancer, if this treatment can effectively remove it, it is a cure.
If you distinguish "treatment" and "cure" as per common usage, the reason current treatments are not cures is that they are not always effective,
Too bad...... (Score:3, Funny)
Add 'nano-' in front of an old idea . . . (Score:1)
after one movie (Score:2, Insightful)
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I'm pondering how the typo "inthereanythingtheycantdo" gets in. You know, I'm starting to think maybe this keyword thing is broken.
For a while, I've been getting this sense of unease. The keyword "whatcouldpossiblygowrong" seemed inappropriate at first until I realized what could possibly go wrong. After all, a genetically modified mosquito which played too much Grand Theft Auto could upload its DNA into Defense computers and start World War III. We really need to consider the ammunition this would give a
isthereanythingtheycantdo? (Score:2)
What the hell happened to conjunctives? (Score:2)
Surely you mean "Carbon Nanotubes Can Exist Safely Inside the Body AND Help Treat Cancer"?
Unless, "help treat cancer" is a seperate sentence in the form of a request (well, if there's anything I can do, I'll help..)
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Surely you mean "Carbon Nanotubes Can Exist Safely Inside the Body AND Help Treat Cancer"?
Unless, "help treat cancer" is a seperate sentence in the form of a request (well, if there's anything I can do, I'll help..)
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Where did here that? (Score:1)
Resistance is futile.
'Nuff said
Expelled? (Score:2)
missing tag: whatcouldpossibleygowrong? (Score:2)
RS
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Well, then we'll just update the entry to "mostly harmless." Problem solved.
What About The Darker Side of Nanotechnology? (Score:1)
When the waste is processed in the municipal sewage facility, the nanotubes aren't captured in the purification process and pass on to the ecosystem as effluent.
Will these nanotubes have the robustness to survive in the wild? Will they get clogged in fish gills causing them to suffocate?
What other mayhem may we be missing by not looking at the whole life cycle of nanoparticles in suc