Nanosensors are being used by scientists for fast detection of cancers through blood tests, helpful as nanomaterial is capable of delivering the medicine at targeted organs.
Nanosensors are being used by scientists for fast detection of cancers through blood tests, helpful as nanomaterial is capable of delivering the medicine at targeted organs.
A technique developed at Yale University in the United States allows scientists to "detect tiny amounts of cancer biomarkers in a small volume of whole blood in just 20 minutes," the journal Nature Nanotechnology reported.Yale added in a statement that the findings could "dramatically simplify the way physicians test for biomarkers of cancer and other diseases."
Researchers developed a device that acts as a filter and catches cancer biomarkers, in this case for prostate and breast cancers, on a chip while washing away the rest of the blood.
This allows for detection of extremely small concentrations on the order of picograms (a trillionth of a gram) per millilitre of blood, Yale said.
"This is the equivalent of being able to detect the concentration of a single grain of salt dissolved in a large swimming pool," it said.
Current cancer tests take several days but the new device is able to read out biomarker concentrations in a just a few minutes.
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A team of French scientists have meanwhile published in another journal, Nature Materials, their work on using nanomaterial to deliver medicine into the body.
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The team had already tested the procedure to deliver medicines to fight AIDS and cancer tumours.
The new materials could also be followed by medical imagery as they travelled to the targeted organ.
Source-AFP
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