Anyone familiar with "nanoparticles"?
Another avenue being investigasted is that of vaccines.
The use of botanical substances is also being advanced as a cure for cancer
Never give up...Steve
Comments
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nanoparticlesunknown said:This comment has been removed by the Moderator
nano is 10 to the -9. In general it is very small. nanoparticles by themselves are pretty much useless. But antibody-nanoparticle conjugates can be very selective. They can seek out and invade any tissue they are targeted for. Now this doesn't particularly mean anything, but if you can then excite those nanoparticles then you might be able to induce hyperthermia. Or perhaps the nanoparticle itself maybe poisonous. Abraxane is currently being used. It is a chemotherapy agent encased in an albumin nanoparticle.0 -
Two new articles on nanotechnology todaysnommintj said:nanoparticles
nano is 10 to the -9. In general it is very small. nanoparticles by themselves are pretty much useless. But antibody-nanoparticle conjugates can be very selective. They can seek out and invade any tissue they are targeted for. Now this doesn't particularly mean anything, but if you can then excite those nanoparticles then you might be able to induce hyperthermia. Or perhaps the nanoparticle itself maybe poisonous. Abraxane is currently being used. It is a chemotherapy agent encased in an albumin nanoparticle.
"Nanotechnology Tackles the Two Biggest Problems Associated With Chemotheraphy" and
"Drug Delivery Breakthrough: Vehicle That Can Carry Drugs to A Specigfic Organelle Inside the Cell"
Check out "Sciencedaily.com" probably one of the best sites on web for such info-it issues articles on research about to be published in scholarly, medical, scientific,etc journals, publications, etc.....steve0 -
Two new articles on nanotechnology todaysnommintj said:nanoparticles
nano is 10 to the -9. In general it is very small. nanoparticles by themselves are pretty much useless. But antibody-nanoparticle conjugates can be very selective. They can seek out and invade any tissue they are targeted for. Now this doesn't particularly mean anything, but if you can then excite those nanoparticles then you might be able to induce hyperthermia. Or perhaps the nanoparticle itself maybe poisonous. Abraxane is currently being used. It is a chemotherapy agent encased in an albumin nanoparticle.
"Nanotechnology Tackles the Two Biggest Problems Associated With Chemotheraphy" and
"Drug Delivery Breakthrough: Vehicle That Can Carry Drugs to A Specigfic Organelle Inside the Cell"
Check out "Sciencedaily.com" probably one of the best sites on web for such info-it issues articles on research about to be published in scholarly, medical, scientific,etc journals, publications, etc.....steve0
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