Nanomedical Devices (a lecture for future)   Lectures on Medical Biophysics Department of Biophysics, Medical Faculty,  Masaryk University in Brno
Basics Nanomedical devices - definition: biomedical devices at the scale 1 - 100nm Very multidisciplinary Promise: New methods for prevention, diagnosis, therapy Daily screening of health (very fast  Point Of Care –  POC  -  testing) Therapy tailored to the individual patient
How much is a nanometer? Notice much smaller than RBC
Nanoshell A nanoshell is composed of a spherical hollow shell of insulator surrounded by a conducting shell of a few nanometer in thickness. By varying the thickness of the conducting shell one can precisely tune the electric and optical properties of nanoshells e.g., make them absorb a certain wavelength of light  Computer simulation depicts growth of gold nanoshell: a silica (glass) spherical core covered with a layer of gold. Gold is a biocompatible compound, making it a useful material for medical applications. Courtesy N. Halas
Nanoshells: Medical Applications -Photothermal Tumor Ablation The nanoshells are coated with receptors that bind to  tumor  cells and are simply injected into the bloodstream. Once delivered to a tumor ,  near infrared light is shone through the skin (near IR  is  not attenuated much by tissue). The nanoshells absorb the IR and convert it to heat with incredible efficiency. This raises the temperature of the local environment of the tumor cells by 10-20 degrees and the cells die. Advantage: zero toxic effects (unlike chemotherapy) no ionizing radiation (like radiotherapy).
Nanoshells: Medical Applications - Single Molecule Raman Spectroscopy Scientists have long known that they could boost the Raman light emissions from a sample by the addition of colloidal particles to a sample. Nanoshells are colloids and can increase the Raman signal by  1000 million  times. In this way it is possible to characterize  single  molecules (such as environmental contaminants, chemical or biological toxins and even viruses). Advantages: very high sensitivity, high levels of multiplexing (simultaneous measurement of many biomolecules), ability to perform detection in blood and other biological matrices.
Nanoshells: Medical Applications - Delivering Insulin Nanoshells loaded with insulin would be injected under the skin, where they would stay for months. To release the drug, patients would use a pen-sized IR laser over the skin at the injection site.
Dendrimers Dendrimers are globular shaped polymers composed of branched repeating units emitting from a central core (like a tree, snowflake).  Biodendrimers are dendrimers comprised of repeating units known to be biocompatible or biodegradable in vivo to natural metabolites.  The cavities present in dendrimers can be used as binding sites for smaller molecules - effectively the dendrite becomes a nanosized ‘container’ for various molecules.
Dendrimers: Medical Applications – Multifunctional nanosized containers (‘Platforms’)
Fullerenes (and nanotubes) Carbon molecules in the shape of a hollow sphere, ellipsoid, tube or ring. Cylindrical fullerenes are often called nanotubes. The smallest fullerene is C 60  (i.e., 60 C atoms)  Other atoms can be trapped inside fullerenes e.g., La@C 82   SWNT - single walled nanotubes MWNT - multiwall carbon nanotube
Fullerenes: Medical Uses Carbon nanotube reinforced catheters (nanotubes have a Young’s modulus 5 times that of steel!) Nanotube-based “cold” cathodes (give up electrons freely without need for thermionic emission). Will change conventional x-ray tube technology as do not need a high power source and are exceptionally durable. Nanotube based small X-ray tubes for radiation therapy inside the body (brachytherapy). Fullerenes with Gd are 5 times better contrast agents than those used presently. Multifunctional platforms: binding specific antibiotics to the fullerene to target resistant bacteria and cancer cells. Fullerenes are not very reactive and are insoluble in many solvents.
Nanopores Nanometer diameter pores pervade biology. They are used to regulate the flow of ions or molecules through the otherwise impermeable, nanometer-thick membranes that surround cells or organelles.  Solidstate nanopores drilled by a focused-ion-beam in a 10 nm thick silicon nitride membrane. The scale bar is 60 nm. Ref: H.D. Tong, H.V. Jansen, V.J. Gadgil, C.G. Bostan, J.W. Berenschot, C.J.M. van Rijn, and M. Elwenspoek, Nano Lett. 4, 283, (2004).
Nanopores: Medical Applications: DNA sequencing As the DNA molecule passes through the nanopore, different bases lead to different drops in the current and hence can be identified.  Such sequencing, could revolutionize the field of genomics, as sequencing could be carried out in a matter of seconds.  Other applications of this technique include separation of single stranded and double stranded DNA in solution, and the determination of length of biopolymers. http://www.ks.uiuc.edu/Research/nanopore/
Nanocrystal A nanocrystal is a crystalline particle with at least one dimension less than 100 nm.  Semiconductor nanocrystals in the sub-10nm size range are often referred to as ‘quantum dots’. A quantum dot has a discrete quantized energy spectrum not energy bands like bigger size of solids.
Nanocrystal: Medical applications: Contrast Media for MRI Imaging
Nanowires A nanowire is a wire of diameter of the order of nm.  Photo: A light-conducting silica nanowire wraps a beam of light around a strand of human hair. The nanowires are flexible and can be as slender as 50 nanometers in width, about one-thousandth the width of a hair. This is far smaller than the smallest capillary in the body! That means nanowires could, in principle, be threaded through the circulatory system to any point in the body without blocking the normal flow of blood or interfering with the exchange of gases and nutrients through the blood-vessel walls
Nanowires: Medical Applications – Brain studies and therapy Bunch of nanowires being guided through the circulatory system to the brain. Once there, the nanowires would spread out branching into tinier and tinier blood vessels. Each nanowire would then be used to record the electrical activity of a single nerve cell, or small groups of nerve cells (better than PET or fMRI!) giving the ability to pinpoint damage from injury and stroke, localize the cause of seizures, and other brain abnormalities. It's long been known that people with Parkinson's disease can experience significant improvement from direct stimulation of the affected area of the brain with electrical pulses. Indeed, that is now a common treatment for patients who do not respond to medication. But the stimulation is currently carried out by inserting wires through the skull and into the brain, a process that causes scarring of brain tissue. The hope is, by stimulating the brain with nanowires threaded through pre-existing blood vessels, doctors could give patients the benefits of the treatment without the damaging side effects.
Nanowires: Medical Applications – Environmental Molecular Sensors Compared to ordinary fiber optic cable, which appears to the naked eye as a uniform glowing line, nanowires have a beaded appearance when viewed under magnification. That's because unlike a normal fiber, which confines light within its walls, minuscule particles of dust along the nanowires' surface can scatter the light beam. This sensitivity to surface contaminants could lead to use of the nanowires as molecular sensors. One could fit the surface of the wire with receptors for environmental molecules. If those target molecules are present, they'll attach to the receptors and blobs of tiny lights will be seen when the wires are illuminated.
Nanowires: Medical Applications: Biomolecular Sensors Roszek  et al.  Medical Nanotechnology
Health Risks Nanoparticles are able to cross biological membranes and access cells, tissues and organs that larger-sized particles normally cannot. They can gain access to the blood stream following inhalation or ingestion. At least some can penetrate the skin. Once in the blood stream, they can be transported around the body and are taken up by organs and tissues including the brain, heart, liver, kidneys, spleen, bone marrow and nervous system. Unlike larger particles, they may be taken up by cell mitochondria and the cell nucleus. Studies demonstrate the potential for DNA mutation and induce major structural damage to mitochondria, even resulting in cell death.  Hundreds of consumer products incorporating nanoparticles are now on the market, including cosmetics, sunscreens, sporting goods, clothing, electronics, baby and infant products, and food and food packaging.
Author:  Carmel J. Caruana Content collaboration:   Vojtěch Mornstein   Graphical design:  - Last revision:  September  200 8

More Related Content

PPTX
Nanomaterials 3
PPT
Nano-Science
PPTX
Quantum Dots PPT
PPTX
ppt of Phy.(Nanophysics)
PPTX
Nanomaterials and nanoparticles
PPTX
Carbon containing Nanomaterials: Fullerenes & Carbon nanotubes
PPTX
Nanomaterials 3
Nano-Science
Quantum Dots PPT
ppt of Phy.(Nanophysics)
Nanomaterials and nanoparticles
Carbon containing Nanomaterials: Fullerenes & Carbon nanotubes

What's hot (20)

PPTX
Core shell nanostructures
PPTX
Nanotechnology and Its Applications
PPTX
Nanotechnology
PPTX
Nanotechnology applications in solar cells
PPTX
NANO TECHNOLOGY
PPTX
Nanotechnology & its applications
PPTX
Nanomaterials
PPTX
Introduction to nanoscience and nanotechnology
PPTX
Nanomaterials
PPTX
Carbon nanotubes
PPTX
Nanoscience and Nanotechnology
PDF
Techniques for synthesis of nanomaterials (II)
PPTX
Nanoparticle
PDF
Nanomaterials
PPTX
Quantum Dots and its applications
PPTX
PPT on "Functionalization of Nanoparticles and Nanoplatelets" by Deepak rawal
PPTX
gold nano particles
PPTX
Bio medical applications of nanomaterials
PPTX
Doping the quantum dots
PPTX
Nano ppt
Core shell nanostructures
Nanotechnology and Its Applications
Nanotechnology
Nanotechnology applications in solar cells
NANO TECHNOLOGY
Nanotechnology & its applications
Nanomaterials
Introduction to nanoscience and nanotechnology
Nanomaterials
Carbon nanotubes
Nanoscience and Nanotechnology
Techniques for synthesis of nanomaterials (II)
Nanoparticle
Nanomaterials
Quantum Dots and its applications
PPT on "Functionalization of Nanoparticles and Nanoplatelets" by Deepak rawal
gold nano particles
Bio medical applications of nanomaterials
Doping the quantum dots
Nano ppt
Ad

Similar to Nanomedical devices (20)

PPTX
Nanotechnology in diagnostic pathology
PPTX
Nanotech in pharmacy
PPTX
Nanotechnology to detect cancer
PPTX
Nanotechnology in diagnostic Pathology
PDF
nanotechnologyinpathology-170705133740.pdf
PPT
Lecture 8 Nanotechnology & Medicine-1.ppt
PPTX
Nanotechnology
PPTX
nanotechfcvvgffggggggvvvgffcvvgfnology.pptx
PPTX
nanotechnology.pptx evrything covered fully
PPTX
1nanomedicine
PPT
5_2019_01_31!12_21_53_AM.ppt
PPT
Nanotechnology & Medicine-Dina Khater.ppt
PPT
Nanotechnology and medicine5_2019_01_31!12_21_53_AM.ppt
PDF
NANO TECHNOLOGY IN MEDICINE by Dr.T.V.Rao MD
PPTX
Nanotechnology in medicine
PPT
Nanotechnology in veterinary medicine
PPTX
Nanotechnology & nanobiotechnology by kk sahu
PPTX
Nano materials for cancer therapy.pptx (seminar).pptx by me
PPT
Principles of Nanobiotechnology. ppt.ppt
PDF
Nano electronics- role of nanosensors, pdf file
Nanotechnology in diagnostic pathology
Nanotech in pharmacy
Nanotechnology to detect cancer
Nanotechnology in diagnostic Pathology
nanotechnologyinpathology-170705133740.pdf
Lecture 8 Nanotechnology & Medicine-1.ppt
Nanotechnology
nanotechfcvvgffggggggvvvgffcvvgfnology.pptx
nanotechnology.pptx evrything covered fully
1nanomedicine
5_2019_01_31!12_21_53_AM.ppt
Nanotechnology & Medicine-Dina Khater.ppt
Nanotechnology and medicine5_2019_01_31!12_21_53_AM.ppt
NANO TECHNOLOGY IN MEDICINE by Dr.T.V.Rao MD
Nanotechnology in medicine
Nanotechnology in veterinary medicine
Nanotechnology & nanobiotechnology by kk sahu
Nano materials for cancer therapy.pptx (seminar).pptx by me
Principles of Nanobiotechnology. ppt.ppt
Nano electronics- role of nanosensors, pdf file
Ad

More from MUBOSScz (20)

DOC
Neuroscience sofia ultimo2
DOCX
BIOCHEMISTRY II EXAM ANSWERS
PPSX
Cz uk
DOCX
Captain’s role
DOC
Tooth, esophagus, stomach, small intestine
DOC
Respiratory syst copy
DOC
Practicals 3 digestive system iii
DOC
Epithelium copy
DOC
Cytology copy
DOC
Connective tissue proper copy
DOC
Cartilage, bone copy
DOC
Cardiovascular system copy
DOC
Bone, cartilage copy
DOC
Blood development copy
DOC
Tissue processing
PDF
Section a dermatology
PDF
Oncology section a
PDF
Section b dermatology
PDF
Working and training in the national health service a guide for im gs final
PDF
Histology slide guide
Neuroscience sofia ultimo2
BIOCHEMISTRY II EXAM ANSWERS
Cz uk
Captain’s role
Tooth, esophagus, stomach, small intestine
Respiratory syst copy
Practicals 3 digestive system iii
Epithelium copy
Cytology copy
Connective tissue proper copy
Cartilage, bone copy
Cardiovascular system copy
Bone, cartilage copy
Blood development copy
Tissue processing
Section a dermatology
Oncology section a
Section b dermatology
Working and training in the national health service a guide for im gs final
Histology slide guide

Recently uploaded (20)

PDF
Transform Your ITIL® 4 & ITSM Strategy with AI in 2025.pdf
PDF
Hindi spoken digit analysis for native and non-native speakers
PDF
Assigned Numbers - 2025 - Bluetooth® Document
PDF
TrustArc Webinar - Click, Consent, Trust: Winning the Privacy Game
PDF
A novel scalable deep ensemble learning framework for big data classification...
PDF
How ambidextrous entrepreneurial leaders react to the artificial intelligence...
PPTX
Tartificialntelligence_presentation.pptx
PDF
A Late Bloomer's Guide to GenAI: Ethics, Bias, and Effective Prompting - Boha...
PPT
Geologic Time for studying geology for geologist
PPTX
Final SEM Unit 1 for mit wpu at pune .pptx
PDF
Hybrid model detection and classification of lung cancer
PPTX
Benefits of Physical activity for teenagers.pptx
PDF
Five Habits of High-Impact Board Members
PDF
Univ-Connecticut-ChatGPT-Presentaion.pdf
PDF
A comparative study of natural language inference in Swahili using monolingua...
PPTX
Modernising the Digital Integration Hub
PDF
DP Operators-handbook-extract for the Mautical Institute
PDF
Video forgery: An extensive analysis of inter-and intra-frame manipulation al...
PDF
NewMind AI Weekly Chronicles – August ’25 Week III
PPTX
MicrosoftCybserSecurityReferenceArchitecture-April-2025.pptx
Transform Your ITIL® 4 & ITSM Strategy with AI in 2025.pdf
Hindi spoken digit analysis for native and non-native speakers
Assigned Numbers - 2025 - Bluetooth® Document
TrustArc Webinar - Click, Consent, Trust: Winning the Privacy Game
A novel scalable deep ensemble learning framework for big data classification...
How ambidextrous entrepreneurial leaders react to the artificial intelligence...
Tartificialntelligence_presentation.pptx
A Late Bloomer's Guide to GenAI: Ethics, Bias, and Effective Prompting - Boha...
Geologic Time for studying geology for geologist
Final SEM Unit 1 for mit wpu at pune .pptx
Hybrid model detection and classification of lung cancer
Benefits of Physical activity for teenagers.pptx
Five Habits of High-Impact Board Members
Univ-Connecticut-ChatGPT-Presentaion.pdf
A comparative study of natural language inference in Swahili using monolingua...
Modernising the Digital Integration Hub
DP Operators-handbook-extract for the Mautical Institute
Video forgery: An extensive analysis of inter-and intra-frame manipulation al...
NewMind AI Weekly Chronicles – August ’25 Week III
MicrosoftCybserSecurityReferenceArchitecture-April-2025.pptx

Nanomedical devices

  • 1. Nanomedical Devices (a lecture for future) Lectures on Medical Biophysics Department of Biophysics, Medical Faculty, Masaryk University in Brno
  • 2. Basics Nanomedical devices - definition: biomedical devices at the scale 1 - 100nm Very multidisciplinary Promise: New methods for prevention, diagnosis, therapy Daily screening of health (very fast Point Of Care – POC - testing) Therapy tailored to the individual patient
  • 3. How much is a nanometer? Notice much smaller than RBC
  • 4. Nanoshell A nanoshell is composed of a spherical hollow shell of insulator surrounded by a conducting shell of a few nanometer in thickness. By varying the thickness of the conducting shell one can precisely tune the electric and optical properties of nanoshells e.g., make them absorb a certain wavelength of light Computer simulation depicts growth of gold nanoshell: a silica (glass) spherical core covered with a layer of gold. Gold is a biocompatible compound, making it a useful material for medical applications. Courtesy N. Halas
  • 5. Nanoshells: Medical Applications -Photothermal Tumor Ablation The nanoshells are coated with receptors that bind to tumor cells and are simply injected into the bloodstream. Once delivered to a tumor , near infrared light is shone through the skin (near IR is not attenuated much by tissue). The nanoshells absorb the IR and convert it to heat with incredible efficiency. This raises the temperature of the local environment of the tumor cells by 10-20 degrees and the cells die. Advantage: zero toxic effects (unlike chemotherapy) no ionizing radiation (like radiotherapy).
  • 6. Nanoshells: Medical Applications - Single Molecule Raman Spectroscopy Scientists have long known that they could boost the Raman light emissions from a sample by the addition of colloidal particles to a sample. Nanoshells are colloids and can increase the Raman signal by 1000 million times. In this way it is possible to characterize single molecules (such as environmental contaminants, chemical or biological toxins and even viruses). Advantages: very high sensitivity, high levels of multiplexing (simultaneous measurement of many biomolecules), ability to perform detection in blood and other biological matrices.
  • 7. Nanoshells: Medical Applications - Delivering Insulin Nanoshells loaded with insulin would be injected under the skin, where they would stay for months. To release the drug, patients would use a pen-sized IR laser over the skin at the injection site.
  • 8. Dendrimers Dendrimers are globular shaped polymers composed of branched repeating units emitting from a central core (like a tree, snowflake). Biodendrimers are dendrimers comprised of repeating units known to be biocompatible or biodegradable in vivo to natural metabolites. The cavities present in dendrimers can be used as binding sites for smaller molecules - effectively the dendrite becomes a nanosized ‘container’ for various molecules.
  • 9. Dendrimers: Medical Applications – Multifunctional nanosized containers (‘Platforms’)
  • 10. Fullerenes (and nanotubes) Carbon molecules in the shape of a hollow sphere, ellipsoid, tube or ring. Cylindrical fullerenes are often called nanotubes. The smallest fullerene is C 60 (i.e., 60 C atoms) Other atoms can be trapped inside fullerenes e.g., La@C 82 SWNT - single walled nanotubes MWNT - multiwall carbon nanotube
  • 11. Fullerenes: Medical Uses Carbon nanotube reinforced catheters (nanotubes have a Young’s modulus 5 times that of steel!) Nanotube-based “cold” cathodes (give up electrons freely without need for thermionic emission). Will change conventional x-ray tube technology as do not need a high power source and are exceptionally durable. Nanotube based small X-ray tubes for radiation therapy inside the body (brachytherapy). Fullerenes with Gd are 5 times better contrast agents than those used presently. Multifunctional platforms: binding specific antibiotics to the fullerene to target resistant bacteria and cancer cells. Fullerenes are not very reactive and are insoluble in many solvents.
  • 12. Nanopores Nanometer diameter pores pervade biology. They are used to regulate the flow of ions or molecules through the otherwise impermeable, nanometer-thick membranes that surround cells or organelles. Solidstate nanopores drilled by a focused-ion-beam in a 10 nm thick silicon nitride membrane. The scale bar is 60 nm. Ref: H.D. Tong, H.V. Jansen, V.J. Gadgil, C.G. Bostan, J.W. Berenschot, C.J.M. van Rijn, and M. Elwenspoek, Nano Lett. 4, 283, (2004).
  • 13. Nanopores: Medical Applications: DNA sequencing As the DNA molecule passes through the nanopore, different bases lead to different drops in the current and hence can be identified. Such sequencing, could revolutionize the field of genomics, as sequencing could be carried out in a matter of seconds. Other applications of this technique include separation of single stranded and double stranded DNA in solution, and the determination of length of biopolymers. http://www.ks.uiuc.edu/Research/nanopore/
  • 14. Nanocrystal A nanocrystal is a crystalline particle with at least one dimension less than 100 nm. Semiconductor nanocrystals in the sub-10nm size range are often referred to as ‘quantum dots’. A quantum dot has a discrete quantized energy spectrum not energy bands like bigger size of solids.
  • 15. Nanocrystal: Medical applications: Contrast Media for MRI Imaging
  • 16. Nanowires A nanowire is a wire of diameter of the order of nm. Photo: A light-conducting silica nanowire wraps a beam of light around a strand of human hair. The nanowires are flexible and can be as slender as 50 nanometers in width, about one-thousandth the width of a hair. This is far smaller than the smallest capillary in the body! That means nanowires could, in principle, be threaded through the circulatory system to any point in the body without blocking the normal flow of blood or interfering with the exchange of gases and nutrients through the blood-vessel walls
  • 17. Nanowires: Medical Applications – Brain studies and therapy Bunch of nanowires being guided through the circulatory system to the brain. Once there, the nanowires would spread out branching into tinier and tinier blood vessels. Each nanowire would then be used to record the electrical activity of a single nerve cell, or small groups of nerve cells (better than PET or fMRI!) giving the ability to pinpoint damage from injury and stroke, localize the cause of seizures, and other brain abnormalities. It's long been known that people with Parkinson's disease can experience significant improvement from direct stimulation of the affected area of the brain with electrical pulses. Indeed, that is now a common treatment for patients who do not respond to medication. But the stimulation is currently carried out by inserting wires through the skull and into the brain, a process that causes scarring of brain tissue. The hope is, by stimulating the brain with nanowires threaded through pre-existing blood vessels, doctors could give patients the benefits of the treatment without the damaging side effects.
  • 18. Nanowires: Medical Applications – Environmental Molecular Sensors Compared to ordinary fiber optic cable, which appears to the naked eye as a uniform glowing line, nanowires have a beaded appearance when viewed under magnification. That's because unlike a normal fiber, which confines light within its walls, minuscule particles of dust along the nanowires' surface can scatter the light beam. This sensitivity to surface contaminants could lead to use of the nanowires as molecular sensors. One could fit the surface of the wire with receptors for environmental molecules. If those target molecules are present, they'll attach to the receptors and blobs of tiny lights will be seen when the wires are illuminated.
  • 19. Nanowires: Medical Applications: Biomolecular Sensors Roszek et al. Medical Nanotechnology
  • 20. Health Risks Nanoparticles are able to cross biological membranes and access cells, tissues and organs that larger-sized particles normally cannot. They can gain access to the blood stream following inhalation or ingestion. At least some can penetrate the skin. Once in the blood stream, they can be transported around the body and are taken up by organs and tissues including the brain, heart, liver, kidneys, spleen, bone marrow and nervous system. Unlike larger particles, they may be taken up by cell mitochondria and the cell nucleus. Studies demonstrate the potential for DNA mutation and induce major structural damage to mitochondria, even resulting in cell death. Hundreds of consumer products incorporating nanoparticles are now on the market, including cosmetics, sunscreens, sporting goods, clothing, electronics, baby and infant products, and food and food packaging.
  • 21. Author: Carmel J. Caruana Content collaboration: Vojtěch Mornstein Graphical design: - Last revision: September 200 8