"Red blood cells travel through the bloodstream delivering vital oxygen to body tissues and taking away unwanted carbon dioxide – and they have to squeeze through blood vessels as thin as 3 micrometres across to do it. But in some diseases, such as malaria and sickle cell disease, red blood cells lose this ability to deform.
Because of the small size of red blood cells and the demanding work they do, nobody has succeeded in making artificial versions to help people with such conditions.
Now though Joseph DeSimone, a chemical engineer at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, US, thinks he knows how.
He has created tiny sacks of the polymer polyethylene glycol just 8 micrometres across – in the range of human red blood cells – that are capable of deforming in a way that allows them to pass through the tiniest capillaries."
This article is very intriguing with the ability to replicate human cells in an artifical form that will help patients with certain diseases.
The rest can be found here: http://technology.newscientist.com/article/dn13784-invention-plastic-red-blood-cells.html
Subscribe to:
Post Comments (Atom)
1 comment:
Its crazy to see how far technology has come.. Perhaps the world of I-Robots is not too far off.
Post a Comment