Effective Cancer Therapy Design Through the Integration of Nanotechnology

Laser therapies can provide a minimally invasive treatment alternative to surgical resection of tumors. However, therapy effectiveness is limited due to nonspecific heating of target tissue, leading to healthy tissue injury and extended treatment durations. These therapies can be further compromised...

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Main Author: Fisher, Jessica Won Hee
Other Authors: Biomedical Engineering
Format: Others
Published: Virginia Tech 2014
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/10919/34386
http://scholar.lib.vt.edu/theses/available/etd-08062008-223531/
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spelling ndltd-VTETD-oai-vtechworks.lib.vt.edu-10919-343862021-06-23T05:28:49Z Effective Cancer Therapy Design Through the Integration of Nanotechnology Fisher, Jessica Won Hee Biomedical Engineering Rylander, M. Nichole Rylander, Christopher G. Dorn, Harry C. Huxtable, Scott T. multi-walled nanotubes tissue phantom laser therapy carbon nanohorns hyperthermia heat shock proteins Laser therapies can provide a minimally invasive treatment alternative to surgical resection of tumors. However, therapy effectiveness is limited due to nonspecific heating of target tissue, leading to healthy tissue injury and extended treatment durations. These therapies can be further compromised due to heat shock protein (HSP) induction in tumor regions where non-lethal temperature elevation occurs, thereby imparting enhanced tumor cell viability and resistance to subsequent therapy treatments. Introducing nanoparticles (NPs), such as multi-walled nanotubes (MWNTs) or carbon nanohorns (CNHs), into target tissue prior to laser irradiation increases heating selectivity permitting more precise thermal energy delivery to the tumor region and enhances thermal deposition thereby increasing tumor injury and reducing HSP expression induction. This research investigates the impact of MWNTs and CNHs in untreated and laser-irradiated monolayer cell culture, tissue phantoms, and/or tumor tissue from both thermal and biological standpoints. Cell viability remained high for all unheated NP-containing samples, demonstrating the non-toxic nature of both the nanoparticle and the alginate phantom. Up-regulation of HSP27, 70 and 90 was witnessed in samples that achieved sub-lethal temperature elevations. Tuning of laser parameters permitted dramatic temperature elevations, decreased cell viability, and limited HSP induction in NP-containing samples compared to those lacking NPs. Preliminary work showed MWNT internalization by cells, which presents imaging and multi-modal therapy options for NT use. The lethal combination of NPs and laser light and NP internalization reveals these particles as being viable options for enhancing the thermal deposition and specificity of hyperthermia treatments to eliminate cancer. Master of Science 2014-03-14T20:42:53Z 2014-03-14T20:42:53Z 2008-07-25 2008-08-06 2008-08-22 2008-08-22 Thesis etd-08062008-223531 http://hdl.handle.net/10919/34386 http://scholar.lib.vt.edu/theses/available/etd-08062008-223531/ Thesis-jfisher-FINAL-grad.pdf In Copyright http://rightsstatements.org/vocab/InC/1.0/ application/pdf Virginia Tech
collection NDLTD
format Others
sources NDLTD
topic multi-walled nanotubes
tissue phantom
laser therapy
carbon nanohorns
hyperthermia
heat shock proteins
spellingShingle multi-walled nanotubes
tissue phantom
laser therapy
carbon nanohorns
hyperthermia
heat shock proteins
Fisher, Jessica Won Hee
Effective Cancer Therapy Design Through the Integration of Nanotechnology
description Laser therapies can provide a minimally invasive treatment alternative to surgical resection of tumors. However, therapy effectiveness is limited due to nonspecific heating of target tissue, leading to healthy tissue injury and extended treatment durations. These therapies can be further compromised due to heat shock protein (HSP) induction in tumor regions where non-lethal temperature elevation occurs, thereby imparting enhanced tumor cell viability and resistance to subsequent therapy treatments. Introducing nanoparticles (NPs), such as multi-walled nanotubes (MWNTs) or carbon nanohorns (CNHs), into target tissue prior to laser irradiation increases heating selectivity permitting more precise thermal energy delivery to the tumor region and enhances thermal deposition thereby increasing tumor injury and reducing HSP expression induction. This research investigates the impact of MWNTs and CNHs in untreated and laser-irradiated monolayer cell culture, tissue phantoms, and/or tumor tissue from both thermal and biological standpoints. Cell viability remained high for all unheated NP-containing samples, demonstrating the non-toxic nature of both the nanoparticle and the alginate phantom. Up-regulation of HSP27, 70 and 90 was witnessed in samples that achieved sub-lethal temperature elevations. Tuning of laser parameters permitted dramatic temperature elevations, decreased cell viability, and limited HSP induction in NP-containing samples compared to those lacking NPs. Preliminary work showed MWNT internalization by cells, which presents imaging and multi-modal therapy options for NT use. The lethal combination of NPs and laser light and NP internalization reveals these particles as being viable options for enhancing the thermal deposition and specificity of hyperthermia treatments to eliminate cancer. === Master of Science
author2 Biomedical Engineering
author_facet Biomedical Engineering
Fisher, Jessica Won Hee
author Fisher, Jessica Won Hee
author_sort Fisher, Jessica Won Hee
title Effective Cancer Therapy Design Through the Integration of Nanotechnology
title_short Effective Cancer Therapy Design Through the Integration of Nanotechnology
title_full Effective Cancer Therapy Design Through the Integration of Nanotechnology
title_fullStr Effective Cancer Therapy Design Through the Integration of Nanotechnology
title_full_unstemmed Effective Cancer Therapy Design Through the Integration of Nanotechnology
title_sort effective cancer therapy design through the integration of nanotechnology
publisher Virginia Tech
publishDate 2014
url http://hdl.handle.net/10919/34386
http://scholar.lib.vt.edu/theses/available/etd-08062008-223531/
work_keys_str_mv AT fisherjessicawonhee effectivecancertherapydesignthroughtheintegrationofnanotechnology
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