Nanotechnology and Cancer TreatmentTop of Mind with Julie Rose • Season 1, Episode 71, Segment 3
May 27, 2015 • 20m
Guest: Ramazan Asmatulu, Ph. D., Mechanical Engineering Professor at Wichita State University
A cancer diagnosis is bad. The treatment is bad, too. And the after-effects of the treatment are bad. But magnetic nanoparticles have shown promise in getting chemotherapy drugs to cancer tumors in a more targeted way, so there’s less collateral damage to surrounding cells. The particles can take many shapes—but are incredibly small: 100,000 times smaller than a human hair . That’s not just invisible to the naked eye—but even to most conventional microscopes.