Raka można porazić prądem

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Raka można porazić prądem

Postprzez moto_kate » Cz lip 26, 2007 12:07 pm

Trochę ogólniejsze doniesienie, ale co tam, wkleję, bo ciekawe:

http://wiadomosci.wp.pl/wiadomosc.html? ... 447807.679

"Raka można porazić prądem
PAP 06:20

Ta metoda walki z nowotworami to spełnienie marzeń pacjentów i lekarzy. Impulsami prądu elektrycznego można zniszczyć komórki rakowe, zachowując nietkniętą zdrową tkankę - pisze "Rzeczpospolita".

Wykorzystanie prądu do zniszczenia guza pozwala dokładnie usunąć komórki raka, zmniejszając ryzyko nawrotu choroby. Na dodatek z zabiegu bez uszkodzeń wychodzą najmniejsze nawet naczynia krwionośne, co oznacza, że tkanka łatwiej się regeneruje i chory szybciej wraca do zdrowia.

Nowa, minimalnie inwazyjna metoda leczenia nowotworów to dzieło amerykańskich specjalistów - inżynierów z Uniwersytetu Kalifornijskiego w Berkeley i politechniki Virginia Tech. Nosi nazwę IRE i wykorzystuje zjawisko otwierania błony otaczającej komórki przez krótkie impulsy prądu elektrycznego. Odpowiednio dobierając długość impulsów i napięcie, można taką błonę rozerwać, doprowadzając do śmierci komórki nowotworowej. [...]"
_______________________________

Serdecznie pozdrawiam,

..:: Kate ::..
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Postprzez Crono5 » Cz lip 26, 2007 3:26 pm

Ciekawe, ogladalem tez na na polsacie info o tym. Tak nwet sobie myslalemczy bylo by cos takiego mozliwe zeby niszczyc komurki nowotworowe pradem skoro jak juz bylo w jednym z postow pole magnetyczne takze na nie oddzialywuje. Hmm teoretycznie mozna by sprubowac w warunkach domowych zmontowac takie urzadzenie, mam znajomego ktory bardzo dobrze zna sie na elektronice ciekawe czy by sie podja...

tutaj link do artykulu po ang:

http://www.rxpgnews.com/research/Biomedical-engineers-use-electric-pulses-to-destroy-cancer-cells_50349.shtml

http://www.dailycal.org/sharticle.php?id=25425 - nowy link

a tutaj artykul ze strony BERKELEY (w sumie dosc stary juz) ze zdjeciem
urzadzenia :

http://www.berkeley.edu/news/media/releases/2007/02/12_IRE.shtml

elektroda:
Obrazek

dodadkowe info:

http://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2007/07/070705100311.htm

oraz:

http://www.eetimes.com/news/latest/showArticle.jhtml?articleID=201000258&printable=true

W sierpniu w czasppismie medycznym "Technology in Cancer Research " ma sie pojawic artykuly opisujace ta nowatorska metode lecznicza:

http://www.tcrt.org/

Z tego wyglada ze sierpniwe wydanie juz sie ukazalo, na szczescie artykuly sa do ogolnego wgladu, poza niektorymi:

"Irreversible Electroporation" - Open acces

http://www.tcrt.org/index.cfm?CFID=14835807&CFTOKEN=22441552&d=3029&c=4236&p=16016&do=detail

Towards Solid Tumor Treatment by Irreversible Electroporation: Intrinsic Redistribution of Fields and Currents in Tissue - Open acces

http://www.tcrt.org/index.cfm?CFID=14835807&CFTOKEN=22441552&d=3029&c=4236&p=16017&do=detail



Mathematical Modeling of Irreversible Electroporation for Treatment Planning -sample

http://www.tcrt.org/index.cfm?CFID=14835807&CFTOKEN=22441552&d=3029&c=4236&p=16018&do=detail



Imaging Guided Percutaneous Irreversible Electroporation: Ultrasound and Immunohistological Correlation - sample
http://www.tcrt.org/index.cfm?CFID=14835807&CFTOKEN=22441552&d=3029&c=4236&p=16021&do=detail



Irreversible Electroporation: Implications for Prostate Ablation - sample
http://www.tcrt.org/index.cfm?CFID=14835807&CFTOKEN=22441552&d=3029&c=4236&p=16024&do=detail



A Study of the Immunological Response to Tumor Ablation with Irreversible Electroporation - sample
http://www.tcrt.org/index.cfm?CFID=14835807&CFTOKEN=22441552&d=3029&c=4236&p=16027&do=detail

The Effect of Irreversible Electroporation on Blood Vessels -sample
http://www.tcrt.org/index.cfm?CFID=14835807&CFTOKEN=22441552&d=3029&c=4236&p=16030&do=detail

Design of an Irreversible Electroporation System for Clinical Use
-sample
http://www.tcrt.org/index.cfm?CFID=14835807&CFTOKEN=22441552&d=3029&c=4236&p=16033&do=detail
Ostatnio edytowano Śr sie 08, 2007 7:06 pm przez Crono5, łącznie edytowano 1 raz
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Zapper

Postprzez palka_k » Pn lip 30, 2007 10:50 pm

Metoda leczenia prądem wszelkich chorób została już dawno odkryta przez Biolog Dr H.Clark. Skonstruowała ona urządzenie które generuje prąd o niewielkim natężeniu i odpowiedniej częstotliwości do terapii którą nazwała "zappingiem". Terapia ta ma na celu skuteczne oczyszczenie naszego organizmu z wszelkiego rodzaju drobnoustroji chorobotwórczych, pasozytów, które według dr Clark są przyczyną powstawania chorób. Badania prowadzone przez dr. H.R. Clark udowodniły ze każdy zywy organizm ma swoje scisle określone pasmo częstotliwości przy którym rozrywane zostaja jego komórki i ginie.

Więcej info w necie oraz w książce "Kuracja życia metodą Dr Clark".

Pozdrawiam,
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Postprzez Crono5 » Śr sie 08, 2007 6:57 pm

Tutaj pokrewny temat na portalu IEEE:

A High-Voltage Fight Against Cancer By Eric Guizzo
Researchers are trying to kill tumors by zapping them with high-voltage, nanosecond electric pulses


przedruk z:

http://staging.spectrum.odaly.com/jun04/3942

10 June 2004—In the relentless battle against cancer, researchers are now experimenting with a shocking new treatment—literally. They discovered that by zapping cells with extremely brief, high-voltage electric pulses, they could trigger the self-destruct mechanism in the cells' biochemical machinery. This mechanism, called apoptosis or programmed cell death, occurs naturally in the body, as tissues continually eliminate cells that are old, damaged, or simply no longer necessary.


Obrazek

Photo: Courtesy Stephen Buescher, Eastern Virginia Medical School


The researchers are trying to find types of electric pulses that can trigger the suicide mechanism in cancer cells without affecting healthy ones. They hope the method will one-day serve as a tumor treatment that is less invasive than surgical removal and has fewer harmful side effects than chemotherapy. But critics caution that the technology is clinically unproven and may not make it out of the lab.

The technique's co-discoverer, Karl H. Schoenbach, an IEEE fellow and electrical engineering professor at Old Dominion University in Norfolk, Va., is expected to report his latest findings on 21 June at the Bioelectromagnetics Society's annual conference in Washington, D.C. Research groups in England, France, Germany, and the United States are currently conducting experiments with the technique.
Photo: Courtesy Stephen Buescher, Eastern Virginia Medical School

Programmed To Die: Human leukemia cells on a microscope slide were zapped with a single, extremely brief, high-voltage electric field pulse [far left]. The cells had been dyed with a fluorescent compound that reveals the presence of enzymes associated with the activation of the cells' self-destruct mechanism. As time goes on, progressively more cells [left to right] develop the enzyme.

Schoenbach and Stephen Beebe, a professor of pediatrics at Eastern Virginia Medical School, also in Norfolk, first reported inducing apoptosis in cancer cells with electric pulses in 2001. They took mice and injected cancer cells in both flanks—one for treatment and the other to serve as the control—and let the tumors develop. After some time, using needle electrodes, they zapped one of the tumors with a series of electric pulses 300 nanoseconds long and 60 kilovolts per centimeter in magnitude. They found that the treated tumor grew only 50 to 60 percent as big as the untreated tumor, with many cells dying by apoptosis. Since then, the pair has been working to eliminate tumors completely and to do it with a single pulse.

While the result seems promising, it is far too early to celebrate. "This is very interesting science and new technology, but it is far too early to even hint that the method may have a clinical application and, if so, what that might be," says Kenneth R. Foster, a bioengineering professor at the University of Pennsylvania, in Philadelphia, and an expert on the effects of electromagnetic fields on living tissue.

Researchers have yet to perform the many animal and human trials needed to get the technique approved for use by doctors, and those experiments are probably years in the future, Foster says. "There is a big difference between inducing apoptosis in some cells in suspension or in some cells in a tumor and in destroying a tumor in any clinically meaningful way," he adds.

Schoenbach and Beebe's technology is far from the only way to induce cell suicide. Dianne E. Godar, a research biochemist at the U.S. Food and Drug Administration's Center for Devices and Radiological Health in Rockville, Md., who works with cancer causes and treatments, says she "can list about a thousand biological, chemical, and physical agents that can induce apoptosis" in cancer cells and in solid tumors, or that can inhibit tumor growth. Additional experiments, she says, have to be done if we want to compare the electric-pulse treatment with existing treatments.

One goal of future experiments is to identify what it is in cells that first senses the electric pulses and triggers apoptosis. That information can then be used to find a way to target cancer cells specifically. "There's something that occurs in the cell that it cannot resolve, it cannot fix; so it commits suicide," says Beebe. He says cellular structures known to regulate programmed cell death, including the energy-producing mitochondria and the DNA-storing nucleus, might be involved.

Understanding apoptosis is among the hottest topics in medicine and molecular biology nowadays. The 2002 Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine went to three researchers—Sydney Brenner, John Sulston, and Robert Horvitz—for their seminal work on apoptosis and the genetic regulation of organ development.

Problems with apoptosis are implicated in many diseases, including cancer—when cells fail to undergo apoptosis and multiply wildly—and neurodegenerative disorders such as Alzheimer's disease—when too many cells die. So, for cancer, scientists want to find ways to induce apoptosis; for Alzheimer's, they want to block it.

Decades before the focus on apoptosis, scientists used electric pulses of a lower voltage and longer duration to create temporary pores in the outer membranes of cells. This technique, called electroporation, is now widely used in laboratories to inject cells with DNA, drugs, and other kinds of molecules.

A cell in an electric field behaves essentially as a tiny spherical capacitor: its 5-nanometer-thick membrane is a good insulator and is surrounded, inside and out, mostly by salty water. When a field is applied, ions and other charged molecules in the water accumulate outside the cell's membrane. The same process happens inside the cell, and as a result, a voltage builds up across the membrane.

" When the voltage across the membrane gets up to between 0.5 and 1 volt, something dramatic happens," says James C. Weaver, a senior research scientist at the Harvard-Massachusetts Institute of Technology's Division of Health Sciences and Technology, in Cambridge. The voltage causes a breakdown in the membrane's insulating properties, opening a large number of temporary pores all over it. Ions and other large molecules can pass through the pores in the membrane, which temporarily changes from being an insulator to being a conductor.

Today, electroporation is used experimentally to enhance the efficacy of chemotherapy, Weaver says that the procedure opens large pores in cancer cells, forcing them to absorb more of an anticancer drug such as bleomycin, which damages DNA, killing the cell. Researchers working on this combination of electroporation and chemotherapy include Lluis Mir at the CNRS-Institute Gustave-Roussy, in Villejuif, in France; Richard Heller at the University of South Florida, Tampa; and researchers at the Genetronics Biomedical in San Diego.

The electric field pulses used in such experiments have intensities on the order of kilovolts per centimeter, which last from microseconds to milliseconds. But Schoenbach realized that a pulse with a shorter duration, on the order of nanoseconds, would not last long enough to bring ions to the cell membrane and build a voltage high enough to break it down. Instead, the faster pulse seems to bypass the cell membrane, affecting structures inside cells such as the nucleus. Like the cell itself, these structures have membranes that are good insulators, and therefore they also act as tiny capacitors that can charge up.

Schoenbach and Beebe discovered that these short, high intensity pulses could jolt the guts of the cells in a way that activates their self-destruction machinery. So, in principle, a treatment based on these short pulses would not require a drug like bleomycin: the pulses themselves would be the killing agents.

Delivering such a tremendous voltage in just a few billionths of a second is akin to accelerating a car from 0 to 100 kilometers per hour and then decelerating it back to 0, all within 1 second. The system Schoenbach's group built to perform the task consists of a commercially available high-voltage source used in powerful lasers and X-ray devices connected to a so-called pulse form network, a circuit that creates the nanoseconds-long powerful electric field between two electrodes.

The pulse form network, Schoenbach says, is a complex arrangement of interconnected cables and electronic components, but it works essentially as a transmission line. The 40 000-kV source delivers a burst of electrical energy to one end of the line through a spark-gap switch and it travels toward the electrodes. During the brief time the stream of energy flows along the line—a few billionths of a second—an electric field of hundreds of kilovolts per centimeter appears between the tiny electrodes.

The electrodes, usually a few millimeters apart, don't necessarily need to touch the cells. It is the electric field between them that does the work. So far, the group has used needles as electrodes, but researchers are studying other sophisticated ways of applying the field, including antennas that could zap a tumor inside the body at a distance. "That's a daunting task," Schoenbach says. "We need extremely high electric fields and high power broadband antennas. That's really futuristic at this point."

Regardless of how the pulses are delivered, the high voltages involved make the setup sounds more like a new cooking technique than a cancer treatment. But the actual energy delivered is quite low, less than a joule, not even enough to heat the cells single degree Celsius. This is because, even though the amount of power involved is enormous—16 megawatts or 16 megajoules per second—it is applied for only a few nanoseconds.

" Usually when people think about electricity, they think about a brutal way of killing—electrocution, burning, this kind of thing," says Schoenbach. "Our method is focusing on extremely short pulses, so that there's no thermal effect, no heating involved. It's purely an electrical effect."

Ultimately, the success of ultrafast, high-voltage pulses as a cancer treatment depends on whether a pulse of particular duration or voltage will preferentially kill tumor cells rather than normal cells. "The trick with all cancer therapies is to find a therapeutic window where the therapy kills the tumor cells without too great a collateral effect on sensitive normal tissues," says Gerard I. Evan, a professor of cancer biology at the University of California at San Francisco.

Evan says the results obtained by Schoenbach, Beebe, and their colleagues are intriguing, but more experiments are necessary to determine whether such electric fields would exhibit the necessary specificity. It's particularly important, he says, that researchers identify the molecular mechanism by which the pulses trigger apoptosis. Only then will it be possible to get some idea as to whether the pulses might be effective as a treatment some day.

And researchers have yet to figure out what exactly is happening within zapped cells. "We know the start—we have to have this series of extremely short pulses. And we know the end—we create apoptosis," Schoenbach says. "What we're looking for now is what is in between."




oraz:

przedruk z:

http://www.physorg.com/news11697.html

Study: Electricity kills cancer cells Discussion at PhysOrgForum
Scientists from Old Dominion University and Eastern Virginia Medical School say they've killed melanomas in mice using high-powered jolts of electricity.


Using extremely short, high-voltage doses of electricity, the researchers told the Virginian-Pilot they've never had a tumor that did not respond to the treatment.

Richard Nuccitelli, associate professor of electrical and computer engineering at Old Dominion, said the method might eventually turn into an effective cancer treatment.

The electric bursts often disrupted the blood flow to the tumor cells and shrunk their nuclei by 50 percent, Nuccitelli said. The tumors died after two or three weeks of treatments, each session involving hundreds of electrical pulses, each less than one-one millionth of a second and carrying 4,000 volts.

Nuccitelli told the Virginian-Pilot he and his colleagues believe the process works by severely damaging DNA in the cells. The treatment produced no scarring and did not harm adjacent cells. All of the research mice survived, with no ill effects.

The scientists said additional research will be needed before they can experiment on people.

The research is to appear online Wednesday in the journal Biochemical and Biophysical Research Communications.

a takze:



'Electric hole-punch' could fight cancer
THURSDAY 15 FEBRUARY 2007


przedruk z:

http://info.cancerresearchuk.org/news/newsarchive/2007/february/18062011

A new technique developed by researchers at the University of California, Berkeley, kills cancer cells by punching holes in their membranes with microsecond pulses of electricity.

The process, called 'electroporation', was first discovered in the 1970s, but since then most research has focused on creating temporary holes that can allow drugs or genes into cells before resealing.

Using slightly longer and stronger pulses opens permanent holes however, causing the cells to die.

The technique is an improvement over other non-invasive therapies, such as the use of either extreme heat or extreme cold, as it leaves the surrounding connective tissue 'scaffolding' intact.

This, say the researchers, allows healthy tissue to grow back much more quickly.

The technique has so far been trialled in animals but will require far more extensive testing before it could be used in humans, the researchers said.

"While we are obviously very excited about this advance in tumour ablation, we are in the early stages of our learning curve," said co-author Dr Gary Onik.

"We undoubtedly have much more to learn, and there is always the potential for unexpected results."

The study is published in Technology in Cancer Research and Treatment.
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