Roland Piquepaille's Technology Trends
How new technologies are modifying our way of life


mardi 16 mars 2004
 

Killing cells affected by cancer while leaving healthy ones alone is not a new idea (check here or there for example). But, in "Ultra-fast shocks scramble cells," Nature describes a new approach based on electrical nanopulses. These electric shocks last only a few billionths of a second while reaching during this very short amount of time power levels of terawatts. They also are very intriguing, apparently forcing cancer cells to commit suicide.

The technique involves blasting cells with nanopulses. These are high-power electrical bolts that last a few billionths of a second. They deliver millions of volts - enough power to light up a city, but each burst lasts much less than the blink of an eye.
Longer shocks blow a cell apart, but researchers have found that the fleeting nanopulses leave the cell membrane unaffected while mixing up its insides. Now they are working out how to vary the timing and intensity of the shocks to make cells behave in specific ways.

Here are two images showing how ultrashort pulses affect the intracellular structure, leaving the cell membrane intact (Credit: Center for Bioelectrics).

Cell touched by a nanoplulse Effect of a nanopilse on a cell

Is this technique ready for human deployment? Not quite yet.

There is plenty to be worked out before the human body is zapped with nanopulses. James Weaver, who studies electrical effects in cells at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Boston, says they are at an early stage: "There are maybe ten papers published showing that something dramatic is happening."

One puzzling aspect of this technique is the electric shocks are pushing cells to commit suicide. Scientists are not sure why.

One of the most significant discoveries was that nanopulses make mammalian cells commit suicide, rather than blowing them up. This is a relatively gentle way of killing, because scavenger cells come and swallow the debris. By contrast, long electric shocks explode cells and liberate toxic molecules that cause inflammation and pain.
For this reason, researchers hope to use nanopulses to kill cancer cells while leaving healthy tissue intact. Karl Schoenbach's team at the Center for Bioelectrics in Norfolk, Virginia, has already shown that the pulses can shrink mouse tumours by over 50%, and is working on catheters or non-invasive ways to deliver the shocks to the body.

For more information about their research projects, you can look at this page or check this presentation (PDF format, 19 pages, 1.31 MB).

Source: Helen Pearson, Nature, March 16, 2004


2:14:46 PM   Permalink   Comments []   Trackback []  


Click here to visit the Radio UserLand website. © Copyright 2004 Roland Piquepaille.
Last update: 01/11/2004; 08:57:27.


March 2004
Sun Mon Tue Wed Thu Fri Sat
  1 2 3 4 5 6
7 8 9 10 11 12 13
14 15 16 17 18 19 20
21 22 23 24 25 26 27
28 29 30 31      
Feb   Apr


Search this blog for

Courtesy of PicoSearch


Supported by
BigFitness.com

If you're tired to read about technology, it's time to take a break.
Try their exercise and fitness equipment.
Read more


Personal Links



Other Links

Ars Technica
Bloglines
BoingBoing
Daily Rotation News
del.icio.us
Engadget
Feedster
Gizmodo
I4U News
Mindjack Daily Relay
Nanodot
Slashdot
Smart Mobs
Techdirt
Technorati


People

Paul Boutin
Dan Gillmor
Lawrence Lessig
Jenny Levine
Karlin Lillington
John Robb
Dolores Tam
Jon Udell
Dave Winer


Drop me a note via Radio
Click here to send an email to the editor of this weblog.

E-mail me directly at
pique@noos.fr

Subscribe to this weblog
Subscribe to "Roland Piquepaille's Technology Trends" in Radio UserLand.

XML Version of this page
Click to see the XML version of this web page.