This is your brain on nanoparticles
I picked up a copy of Technology Review yesterday and noticed with interest that:
1) Researchers in India want to use tiny (5-nm diameter) gold particles for insulin delivery. You sniff in the particles, which are coated in insulin, and they get absorbed through the mucous membrane of your nose. Now, why would anyone think this was a good idea? Well, supposedly because it provides a way of getting drugs like insulin (which break down in your stomach) into your body without injections. That is, IF the gold particles do not end up building up in your body and causing harmful effects.
2) A variety of studies are now being done on the toxicity of carbon nanotubes and other nanoparticles in lab animals. One study (Operdorster et al, U. of Rochester) showed that nanoparticles inhaled by rats can end up in their brains.
Hmm… and so the implication of these two articles together…?
Granted. I am certainly not arguing that these two news briefs are conclusive.* But I am growing frustrated with the marketing of EVERYTHING "nano" as a potential cure for cancer, even when the toxicity is completely unknown, or even suspect. It seems like bio-compatability/safety ought to be the FIRST design criterion for new medical methods.
But then again: the x-ray machine, one of the most useful medical diagnostic devices of all time, is itself intrinsically toxic — x-ray radiation causes cancer. It has only been through careful engineering that high-quality images can be obtained using acceptably low dosages of radiation. So I will allow some hope for the alleged medical nano-revolution, if the biomedical engineers can do the job right. Certainly the x-ray proves the principle that basic research in the physical sciences has led to fundamentally-new technologies used in medicine.
* Probably not studying the same type of nanoparticle, animal models don’t necessarily reproduce human reactions, this was only one study, need more research, etc. etc. etc…
