MIT Injects Nanotubes To Help Fight Cancer
CWmike writes to tell us that researchers at MIT have found a way to wrap nanotube sensors in DNA to detect the results of chemotherapy. The sensors are able to detect whether the drugs are attacking their targets or healthy cells. "Cancer researchers have long been trying to figure out a way to better deliver drugs to cancer cells without blasting surrounding cells as well. The Stanford researchers devised a way to use single-walled carbon nanotubes as targeted medicinal delivery vehicles. By better targeting the chemotherapy, less of the drug needs to be injected into the patient for cancer treatment. And that would reduce the side effects of chemotherapy treatment, such as nausea, hair loss, weight loss and fatigue."
Didn't Carbon Nanotube been found to cause cancer?
If something is so important that you feel the need to post it on the internet... It probably isn't that important.
After 30 years of reading science news, I'm not holding my breath for cancer. The facts are pretty much the same. If you get small cell lung cancer, you have a 90% chance of dying. John Wayne died of it, and if you get it, you will too.
Bone cancer, pancreatic cancer, all of those are pretty much fatal as well.
Others are not so fatal, but early treatment matters. Breast cancer is one. If you get a cancer that you can and do survive, you'll probably have lifelong health problems as a result, as much from the treatment as the cancer itself, and you won't ever really be completely cured.
This is my sig.
That the cure for cancer was a series of nanotubes?
old proverb
"The Stanford researchers devised a way to use single-walled carbon nanotubes as targeted medicinal delivery vehicles."
TFA says both schools (as well as UCSD) are working on it...as the father of someone undergoing chemo, I say: Good for them.
That was my first thought when I read this.
My first thought was
"Wow, those crazy kids at MIT, whacking up nano-tubes. What will they try next, Wasabi enema's?"
And that would reduce the side effects of chemotherapy treatment, such as nausea, hair loss, weight loss and fatigue."
Or, the patient could use 100% safe marijuana. Hmmm... ingest a harmless plant that grows anywhere and everywhere, or get injected with electronics and DNA. Hmmm... Apparently nobody in the medical community has heard of the good 'ol "KISS" acronym.
I've heard this for a while, and it was in popsci a month or two ago.