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Mosquitos Inspire Revolutionary Cancer Treatment

A collaboration between doctors and engineers at Virginia Tech has resulted in a new way to treat cancer. A needle just 40 microns thick can deliver chemotherapy and nanodrugs. 
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What’s the Latest Development?


A team of engineers at Virginia Tech have taken a cue from nature in order to create a novel cancer treatment that delivers medicine to precise areas of cancerous tissue. Just as the mosquito injects its microneedle several millimeters deep into the human skin, engineers have developed a fiber-optic needle “the same size and shape of a mosquito’s stinger.” The needle is less than the width of a human hair—just 40 microns thick—and very sharp. “It can inject fluids directly into a tumor—delivering things like conventional chemotherapy drugs or more-cutting-edge nanoparticles.”

What’s the Big Idea?

The fiber-optic microneedle device, or FMD, can also deliver light from powerful lasers, killing cancer tissues up close. And by using the needle to inject light-absorbing nanoparticles into infected tissue, medical professionals can better control the precision of targeted light treatments. The FMD represents “two cancer-fighting treatments combined into one medical device to find and destroy unwanted tissue. This fiber-optic microneedle device is the basis for a whole series of experimental technologies that may one day change the way doctors treat cancer patients.”

Photo credit: Shutterstock.com

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