Nanotechnology Used To Kill Cancer
to_kallon writes "A company called Kereos is developing a pair of nanotechnologies to identify tumors that measure just 1 mm in diameter, then kill them with a tiny but precise amount of a chemotherapy drug."
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Come on, y'all. We all know that Slashdot isn't a news site, but you guys please at least pretend to be occasionally? How's this for a suggestion:
Nanotechnology may someday be used to fight cancer
How's that?
I write in my journal
Could this technology be abused to seek out certain cells associated with memory, pleasure, pain, etc.
.025 millimeter fab/chip; give us the secret sauce recipe...)
Imagine if these nanotech bots could lie dormant, awaiting activation by an authority or a torturer. People could be abducted, injected, released, and then tortured into complying with all sorts of illegal requests (get us a copy of that
Alternatively, this could be used to somehow little by little nudge the lifespan of cells upward a few percentage points...
Previously: "Linux... Toward the Sunrise..." Now: "Linux... Toward the-- No, now, part of Every Sunrise"
huh, I wonder what kind of cancer treatment wouldn't sound incredibly dangerous to you then.
how about RADIATION?
or just old style POISONS?
the thing is, cancer cells need to be KILLED...
there's lots of treatments that are extremely dangerous.. but they're still worth it.
world was created 5 seconds before this post as it is.
It is possible for something like this to go rampant, but it would not kill every cell in your body; not even close.
The whole point to this is to be able to deliver very small quantities of drug to precisely where it needs to be. The current strategy with chemotherapeutics is that you deliver drug to the whole body, trying to keep a steady-state level in the tissues that will be lethal to the tumor, but only minimally impact normal cells. You play on the increased susceptibility of cancer cells to the drug. This is often not universally effective; which is why cancer patients can be killed by the treatment, lose their hair and often develop GI problems, among other things. The point was made before, and it is accurate: Chemotherapeutics are poisons.
With this technology, instead of just giving the drug systemically, you chemically tie it up until it gets to the right location. It then dumps the drug payload locally, increasing the concentration right on top of the cancer cell, and only on top of the cancer cell. Even if these did just bind to random cells in the body and activate, there would be a diffuse and random population of cells that died or are even affected. Effects would most likely be minimal, if even noticeable.
Think nuke and hand grenade. Ignoring morale and morality, a few hand grenades going off in random places in a city won't do any real damage. But, it they go off in just the right place during an attack, they can do a lot of good.
There is a reason for everything. Sometimes that reason just sucks.