KhbarExpress www.khabarexpress.com
Welcome Guest Sign In New user! Sign Up Now | My Favourites (new)
UniqueIdea.net Softwares SMS Jokes Poems Story Time Pass Facts
Search Photo  
RSS 22 November 2009
Forum | Wallpapers | Photo Gallery | Business | Entertainment | Education | Sports | Article | City | Cartoon | Video News |
Free News on your website


New nanoparticle may revolutionise cardiovascular disease treatment
5 Jun 2009, 1046 Hrs

Add comment          Mail          Print          Write to Editor



Pelagian's e-Dictionary : Hindi to English and Enlgish Dictionary

Washington, June 5 Scientists in America have developed a nanoparticle that may prove very helpful in treating cardiovascular disease.

Scientists and engineers at UC Santa Barbara, who have done this work with researchers from other places, say that the novel nanoparticle can attack plaque, a major cause of cardiovascular disease.

In a research article, published in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, the researchers have revealed that the focus of their study was atherosclerosis, in which plaque builds up on the walls of arteries and can cause heart attack and stroke.

"The purpose of our grant is to develop targeted nanoparticles that specifically detect atherosclerotic plaques. We now have at least one peptide, described in the paper, that is capable of directing nanoparticles to the plaques," said Erkki Ruoslahti, distinguished professor at the Burnham Institute for Medical Research at the University of California, Santa Barbara.

The researchers have also revealed that the new nanoparticles are lipid-based collections of molecules that form a sphere called a micelle. The micelle has a peptide, a piece of protein, on its surface, and that peptide binds to the surface of the plaque.

"This turned out to be a perfect fit with our targeting technology," said Ruoslahti.

During the study, the researchers intravenously injected the micelles into the mice in which they had induced atherosclerotic plaques by keeping them on a high-fat diet, and let the particles circulate for three hours.

"One important element in what we did was to see if we could target not just plaques, but the plaques that are most vulnerable to rupture. It did seem that we were indeed preferentially targeting those places in the plaques that are prone to rupture," said Ruoslahti.

The researcher points out that the plaques tend to rupture at the "shoulder", where the plaque tissue meets the normal tissue.

"That's also a place where the capsule on the plaque is the thinnest. So by those criteria, we seem to be targeting the right places," said Ruoslahti.

Co-author Matthew Tirrell added: "We think that self-assembled micelles (of peptide amphiphiles) of the sort we have used in this work are the most versatile, flexible nanoparticles for delivering diagnostic and therapeutic biofunctionality in vivo.

The ease with which small particles, with sufficiently long circulation times and carrying peptides that target and treat pathological tissue, can be constructed by self-assembly is an important advantage." (ANI)




Discuss this story on KhabarExpress Forum  


Pelagian Dictionary

nanoparticle
may
revolutionise
cardiovascular
disease
treatment


Comments to this News

Be the first to comment on this News


 
Post Your Comments to this News
 Posting Rules
 
  Name: Email:
 

Top Story of The Day
Latest Articles

22th National Sports competition held at Adarsh Vidhya Mandir, Ganagshahar

Katrina Kaif and Akshay Kumar in Movie De Dana Dan


Education Special

All right reserved by Khabarexpress.com
Contact Us | Archives | Sitemap | Can't see Hindi ?
Special Edition: Lakshchandi Mahayagya, Camel Festival 2007, Vartmaan Sahitya, Bikaner Udyog Craft Mela
Our Network rajb2b.com | khabarexpress.com | uniqueidea.net | PelagianDictionary.com | hindinotes.com
Developed & Designed by Pelagian Softwares