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Radio Waves Used to Destroy LiverTumors
HOUSTON, Nov.
1 (UPI) -- Texas researchers say animal tests show liver tumors can be
destroyed by inserting carbon nanotubes that are heated with non-invasive
radio waves.
The report, posted online
in the journal Cancer, said the technique destroyed liver cancer tumors
in rabbits. Researchers from The University of Texas M.D. Anderson Cancer
Center and Rice University said the next step is to find ways to more precisely
target the nanotubes to avoid all normal tissue.
Dr. Steven Curley, a surgical
oncologist at M.D. Anderson who was senior author of the report, said researchers
are trying to bind the nanotubes to antibodies, peptides or other agents
that target molecules expressed on cancer cells.
In the liver cancer experiment,
a solution of single-walled carbon nanotubes was injected directly into
the tumors. Four treated rabbits were then exposed to two minutes of radio
frequency treatment, resulting in thermal destruction of their tumors,
researchers said Thursday in a news release.
Carbon nanotubes are hollow
cylinders of pure carbon that measure about a billionth of a meter across.