Literature DB >> 20606992

Nanotechnology: the future medicine.

Rajiv Saini1, Santosh Saini, Sugandha Sharma.   

Abstract

Nanotechnology is an exciting new area in science, with many possible applications in medicine. This article seeks to outline the role of different areas such as diagnosis of diseases, drug delivery, imaging, and so on.

Entities:  

Keywords:  Future; medicine; nanotechnology

Year:  2010        PMID: 20606992      PMCID: PMC2890134          DOI: 10.4103/0974-2077.63301

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  J Cutan Aesthet Surg        ISSN: 0974-2077


INTRODUCTION

Nanotechnology can be defined as the science and engineering involved in the design, synthesis, characterization, and application of materials and devices whose smallest functional organization, in at least one dimension, is on the nanometer scale or one billionth of a meter. At these scales, consideration of individual molecules and interacting groups of molecules in relation to the bulk macroscopic properties of the material or device becomes important, as it has a control over the fundamental molecular structure, which allows control over the macroscopic chemical and physical properties.[1] Nanotechnology has found many applications in medicine and this articles outlines some such applications.

POSSIBLE MECHANISMS OF NANOTECHNOLOGY IN RELATION TO MEDICINE

These materials and devices can be designed to interact with cells and tissues at a molecular (i.e., subcellular) level, for applications in medicine and physiology, with a high degree of functional specificity, thus allowing a degree of integration between technology and biological systems not previously attainable. It should be appreciated that nanotechnology is not in itself a single emerging scientific discipline, but rather, a meeting of different traditional sciences, such as, chemistry, physics, materials science and biology, to bring together the required collective expertise needed to develop these novel technologies.[1] The promise that nanotechnology brings is multifaceted, offering not only improvements to the current techniques, but also providing entirely new tools and capabilities. By manipulating drugs and other materials at the nanometer scale, the fundamental properties and bioactivity of the materials can be altered. These tools can permit a control over the different characteristics of drugs or agents such as:[2] alteration in solubility and blood pool retention time controlled release over short or long durations environmentally triggered controlled release or highly specific site-targeted delivery

APPLICATIONS OF NANOMATERIALS IN MEDICINE

These applications include fluorescent biological labels, drug and gene delivery, bio-detection of pathogens, detection of protein, probing of DNA structure, tissue engineering, tumor detection, separation and purification of biological molecules and cells, MRI contrast enhancement and phagokinetic studies.[3] The long-term goal of nanomedicine research is to characterize the quantitative molecular-scale components known as nanomachinery. Precise control and manipulation of nanomachinery in cells can lead to better understanding of the cellular mechanisms in living cells, and to the development of advanced technologies, for the early diagnosis and treatment of various diseases. The significance of this research lies in the development of a platform technology that will influence nanoscale imaging approaches designed to probe molecular mechanisms in living cells.[4] Molecular imaging has emerged as a powerful tool to visualize molecular events of an underlying disease, sometimes prior to its downstream manifestation. The merging of nanotechnology with molecular imaging provides a versatile platform for the novel design of nanoprobes that will have tremendous potential to enhance the sensitivity, specificity and signalling capabilities of various biomarkers in human diseases.[5] Nanoparticle probes can endow imaging techniques with enhanced signal sensitivity, better spatial resolution and the ability to relay information on biological systems at molecular and cellular levels. Simple magnetic nanoparticles can function as magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) contrast enhancement probes. These magnetic nanoparticles can then serve as a core platform for the addition of other functional moieties including fluorescence tags, radionuclides and other biomolecules, for multimodal imaging, gene delivery and cellular trafficking. An (MRI) with hybrid probes of magnetic nanoparticles and adenovirus can detect target cells and monitor gene delivery and expression of green fluorescent proteins optically.[6] Nuclear techniques such as positron-emission tomography (PET) potentially provide detection sensitivities of higher magnitude, enabling the use of nanoparticles at lower concentrations than permitted by routine MRI. Furthermore, a combination of the high sensitivity of PET with the anatomical detail provided by computed tomography (CT) in hybrid imaging, has the potential to map signals to atherosclerotic vascular territories.[7] Molecular imaging always requires accumulation of the contrast agent in the target site, and this can be achieved more efficiently by steering nanoparticles containing the contrast agent into the target. This entails accessing target molecules hidden behind tissue barriers, necessitating the use of targeting groups. For imaging modalities with low sensitivity, nanoparticles bearing multiple contrast groups provide signal amplification. The same nanoparticles can, in principle, deliver both the contrast medium and the drug, allowing monitoring of the bio-distribution and therapeutic activity simultaneously (referred to as theranostics).[8] Such nanofiber-based scaffolds are available in a wide range of pore size distribution, high porosity and high surface area-to-volume ratio. Such a wide range of parameters are favourable for cell attachment, growth and proliferation, and also provide a basis for the future optimization of an electrospun nanofibrous scaffold in a tissue-engineering application.

CONCLUSIONS

Thus, it is concluded that, nanotechnology or systems / device manufacture at the molecular level, is a multidisciplinary scientific field undergoing explosive development. The genesis of nanotechnology can be traced to the promise of revolutionary advances across medicine, communications, genomics and robotics.
  5 in total

1.  Introduction to nanotechnology and its applications to medicine.

Authors:  Gabriel A Silva
Journal:  Surg Neurol       Date:  2004-03

Review 2.  Nanotechnological applications in medicine.

Authors:  Shelton D Caruthers; Samuel A Wickline; Gregory M Lanza
Journal:  Curr Opin Biotechnol       Date:  2007-01-24       Impact factor: 9.740

3.  Synergistically integrated nanoparticles as multimodal probes for nanobiotechnology.

Authors:  Jinwoo Cheon; Jae-Hyun Lee
Journal:  Acc Chem Res       Date:  2008-12       Impact factor: 22.384

Review 4.  Molecular imaging with nanoparticles: giant roles for dwarf actors.

Authors:  Paul Debbage; Werner Jaschke
Journal:  Histochem Cell Biol       Date:  2008-09-30       Impact factor: 4.304

5.  Nanoparticle PET-CT imaging of macrophages in inflammatory atherosclerosis.

Authors:  Matthias Nahrendorf; Hanwen Zhang; Sheena Hembrador; Peter Panizzi; David E Sosnovik; Elena Aikawa; Peter Libby; Filip K Swirski; Ralph Weissleder
Journal:  Circulation       Date:  2007-12-24       Impact factor: 29.690

  5 in total
  29 in total

1.  Disinfection of water and wastewater by biosynthesized magnetite and zerovalent iron nanoparticles via NAP-NAR enzymes of Proteus mirabilis 10B.

Authors:  Sahar A Zaki; Marwa Moustafa Eltarahony; Desouky A Abd-El-Haleem
Journal:  Environ Sci Pollut Res Int       Date:  2019-06-15       Impact factor: 4.223

Review 2.  "Extremely minimally invasive": recent advances in nanotechnology research and future applications in neurosurgery.

Authors:  Tobias A Mattei; Azeem A Rehman
Journal:  Neurosurg Rev       Date:  2014-08-31       Impact factor: 3.042

3.  Folic Acid-Doxorubicin-Double-Functionalized-Lipid-Core Nanocapsules: Synthesis, Chemical Structure Elucidation, and Cytotoxicity Evaluation on Ovarian (OVCAR-3) and Bladder (T24) Cancer Cell Lines.

Authors:  Rodrigo Cé; Vladimir Lavayen; Gabriela Klein Couto; João Guilherme Barreto De Marchi; Barbara Zoche Pacheco; Letícia Antunes Natividade; Tiago Ost Fracari; Taiane Medeiro Ciocheta; Aline de Cristo Soares Alves; Denise Soledade Jornada; Silvia Stanisçuaski Guterres; Fabiana Seixas; Tiago Collares; Adriana Raffin Pohlmann
Journal:  Pharm Res       Date:  2021-02-19       Impact factor: 4.200

Review 4.  Radiolabeled nanomaterials for biomedical applications: radiopharmacy in the era of nanotechnology.

Authors:  Martha Sahylí Ortega Pijeira; Herlys Viltres; Jan Kozempel; Michal Sakmár; Martin Vlk; Derya İlem-Özdemir; Meliha Ekinci; Seshasai Srinivasan; Amin Reza Rajabzadeh; Eduardo Ricci-Junior; Luciana Magalhães Rebelo Alencar; Mohammed Al Qahtani; Ralph Santos-Oliveira
Journal:  EJNMMI Radiopharm Chem       Date:  2022-04-25

Review 5.  Nano-Theranostics for the Sensing, Imaging and Therapy of Prostate Cancers.

Authors:  David G Calatayud; Sotia Neophytou; Eleni Nicodemou; S Giuseppe Giuffrida; Haobo Ge; Sofia I Pascu
Journal:  Front Chem       Date:  2022-04-12       Impact factor: 5.545

6.  Nanotechnology and surgical neurology.

Authors:  Rajiv Saini; Santosh Saini
Journal:  Surg Neurol Int       Date:  2010-09-16

Review 7.  The baffling human body and the boundless nanomaterial boon-a trap for cancer crab.

Authors:  S Jeelani; G S Asokan; G Anuradha; J Parthiban; T Sivasankari
Journal:  J Clin Diagn Res       Date:  2014-07-20

Review 8.  Options for the Development of Noninvasive Glucose Monitoring: Is Nanotechnology an Option to Break the Boundaries?

Authors:  Andreas Thomas; Lutz Heinemann; Araceli Ramírez; Alfred Zehe
Journal:  J Diabetes Sci Technol       Date:  2016-05-03

9.  Surface-Engineered Super-Paramagnetic Iron Oxide Nanoparticles For Chromium Removal.

Authors:  Antony V Samrot; Chamarthy Sai Sahithya; Jenifer Selvarani A; Senthilkumar Pachiyappan; Suresh Kumar S
Journal:  Int J Nanomedicine       Date:  2019-10-09

10.  Antibacterial Activity of Fusidic Acid and Sodium Fusidate Nanoparticles Incorporated in Pine Oil Nanoemulgel.

Authors:  Ahmad M Eid; Ibraheem Istateyeh; Noura Salhi; Thaer Istateyeh
Journal:  Int J Nanomedicine       Date:  2019-12-02
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