Tags: nanomedicine

Description

Nanomedicine is the medical application of nanotechnology. Nanomedicine ranges from the medical applications of nanomaterials, to nanoelectronic biosensors, and even possible future applications of molecular nanotechnology. Current problems for nanomedicine involve understanding the issues related to toxicity and environmental impact of nanoscale materials. More information on Nanomedicine can be found here.

Online Presentations (61-80 of 162)

  1. Illinois BioNanotechnology and Nanomedicine: Applications in Cancer and Mechanobiology Lecture 13: Role of heredity, oncogenes, and tumor suppressors in cancer

    Online Presentations | 31 Oct 2011 | Contributor(s):: Ann M Nardulli

  2. Illinois BioNanotechnology and Nanomedicine: Applications in Cancer and Mechanobiology Lecture 14: Most common cancers in men and women and Quiz

    Online Presentations | 31 Oct 2011 | Contributor(s):: Ann M Nardulli

  3. Illinois BioNanotechnology and Nanomedicine: Applications in Cancer and Mechanobiology Lecture 15: Therapeutic Nanotechnology: Biological pore sizes and nanocarriers

    Online Presentations | 31 Oct 2011 | Contributor(s):: Catherine J. Murphy

    Lecture by Catherine Murphy.

  4. Illinois BioNanotechnology and Nanomedicine: Applications in Cancer and Mechanobiology Lecture 16: Therapeutic Nanotechnology: Metal nanoparticles and hyperthermia

    Online Presentations | 31 Oct 2011 | Contributor(s):: Catherine J. Murphy

    Lecture by Catherine Murphy.

  5. Illinois BioNanotechnology and Nanomedicine: Applications in Cancer and Mechanobiology Lecture 17: Diagnostic Nanotechnology: Colloidal metal nanoparticle optics

    Online Presentations | 31 Oct 2011 | Contributor(s):: Catherine J. Murphy

    Lecture by Catherine Murphy.

  6. Illinois BioNanotechnology and Nanomedicine: Applications in Cancer and Mechanobiology Lecture 18: Diagnostic Nanotechnology: Surface chemistry of nanoparticles

    Online Presentations | 31 Oct 2011 | Contributor(s):: Catherine J. Murphy

    Lecture by Catherine Murphy.

  7. BME 695L Lecture 11: Assessing Nanotoxicity at the Single Cell Level

    Online Presentations | 27 Oct 2011 | Contributor(s):: James Leary

    See references below for related reading.11.1      Need for single cell measures of nanotoxicity11.1.1    There is more than one way for a cell to die...11.1.2    "Necrosis" vs. "Apoptosis"11.1.3    There...

  8. BME 695L Lecture 10: Nanodelivery of Therapeutic Genes and Molecular Biosensor Feedback Control Systems

    Online Presentations | 26 Oct 2011 | Contributor(s):: James Leary

    See references below for related reading.10.1      Introduction and overview10.1.1    Some of the advantages of therapeutic genes10.1.2    Some of the advantages of molecular biosensor feedback control...

  9. Illinois BioNanotechnology and Nanomedicine: Applications in Cancer and Mechanobiology Lecture 2: Micro and Nanofabrication

    Online Presentations | 26 Oct 2011 | Contributor(s):: Rashid Bashir

  10. Illinois BioNanotechnology and Nanomedicine: Applications in Cancer and Mechanobiology Lecture 3: 3-D Biofabrication

    Online Presentations | 26 Oct 2011 | Contributor(s):: Rashid Bashir

  11. Illinois BioNanotechnology and Nanomedicine: Applications in Cancer and Mechanobiology Lecture 4: Lab on Chip - Mechanical

    Online Presentations | 26 Oct 2011 | Contributor(s):: Rashid Bashir

  12. Illinois BioNanotechnology and Nanomedicine: Applications in Cancer and Mechanobiology Lecture 1: BioMEMS and Microfluidics

    Online Presentations | 24 Oct 2011 | Contributor(s):: Rashid Bashir

  13. BME 695L Lecture 9: Challenges of Proper Drug Dosing with Nanodelivery Systems

    Online Presentations | 19 Oct 2011 | Contributor(s):: James Leary

    See references below for related reading.9.1      Overview of drug dosing problem9.1.1    Problems of scaling up doses from animal systems9.1.2    Basing dosing on size, area, weight of...

  14. BME 695L Lecture 8: Surface Chemistry: attaching nanomedical structures to the core

    Online Presentations | 12 Oct 2011 | Contributor(s):: James Leary

    See references below for related reading.8.1      Introduction8.1.1    attachment strategies typically depend on core composition8.1.2    but the attachment strategy should not drive the core...

  15. BME 695L Lecture 6: Normal & Facilitated Cell Entry Mechanisms

    Online Presentations | 04 Oct 2011 | Contributor(s):: James Leary

    See references below for related reading.6.1      Introduction6.1.1    the general problem of cell entry6.1.2    choosing modes of cell entry6.1.3    how does Nature do it?...

  16. BME 695L Lecture 7: Assessing Zeta Potentials

    Online Presentations | 03 Oct 2011 | Contributor(s):: James Leary

    See references below for related reading.7.1      Introduction – the importance of the zeta potential7.1.1    nanoparticle-nanoparticle interactions7.1.2    nanoparticle-cell interactions7.1.3     part of...

  17. BME 695L Lecture 5: Nanomaterials for Core Design

    Online Presentations | 03 Oct 2011 | Contributor(s):: James Leary

    See references below for related reading.5.1      Introduction5.1.1    core building blocks5.1.2    functional cores5.1.3    functionalizing the core surface5.2      Ferric...

  18. BME 695L Lecture 4: Cell Targeting and its Evaluation

    Online Presentations | 03 Oct 2011 | Contributor(s):: James Leary

    See references below for related reading.4.1      Overview: targeting nanosystems to cells4.1.1    antibody targeting4.1.2    peptide targeting4.1.3    aptamer...

  19. BME 695L Lecture 3: Theranostics and Molecular Imaging

    Online Presentations | 07 Sep 2011 | Contributor(s):: James Leary

    See references below for related reading.3.1      Nanomedical systems – levels of challenges3.1.1    Diagnosis - difficult3.1.2    Therapy – more difficult3.1.3    Both ("Theragnosis") – most...

  20. BME 695L Lecture 1: Need for New Perspectives on Medicine

    Online Presentations | 31 Aug 2011 | Contributor(s):: James Leary

    See references below for related reading.1.1      Nanotechnology – Why is something so small so big?1.1.1    Definitions of nanotechnology based on size1.1.2    A “bottoms up” rather than “tops down”...