submit news    HOME | FEEDBACK  


« NAVIGATION »
NEWS

- Bio/Medicine

- Chemicals

- Defense

- Drug Delivery

- Education

- Electronics

- Energy

- Events

- Grants

- Industry

- Investment

- Litigation

- Materials

- MEMS

- Nanofabrication

- Nanoparticles

- Nanotubes

- Optics

- Partnership

- Patent

- Products

- Quantum dots

- Research

- Smart Dust

- Software
COMPANIES
EVENTS

- Browse by Month

- Current Shows

- Previous Shows

- Submit Events
FEEDBACK
ADVERTISE
LINK TO US

« PARTNERS »
Become A Nanotechwire Partner

FEI Company

Veeco Instruments

NanoDynamics

Nano Science and Technology Institute

National Nanotechnology Initiative

Nanotechnology at Zyvex

Want to see your Company or Organization listed above? Become A Nanotechwire Partner Today - click here
« NEWSLETTER »



« SEARCH »







11/11/2006 2:28:52 PM
Neural networking nanotubes

New implantable biomedical devices that can act as artificial nerve cells, control severe pain, or allow otherwise paralyzed muscles to be moved might one day be possible thanks to developments in materials science. Writing today in Advanced Materials, Nicholas Kotov of the University of Michigan, USA, and colleagues describe how they have used hollow, submicroscopic strands of carbon, carbon nanotubes, to connect an integrated circuit to nerve cells. The new technology offers the possibility of building an interface between biology and electronics.

Kotov and colleagues at Oklahoma State University and the University of Texas Medical Branch have explored the properties of single-walled nanotubes (SWNTs) with a view to developing these materials as biologically compatible components of medical devices, sensors, and prosthetics. SWNTs are formed from carbon atoms by various techniques including deposition and resemble a rolled up sheet of chicken wire, but on a tiny scale. They are usually just a few nanometers across and up to several micrometers in length.

The researchers built up layers of their SWNTs to produce a film that is electrically conducting even at a thickness of just a few nanometers. They next grew neuron precursor cells on this film. These precursor cells successfully differentiated into highly branched neurons. A voltage could then be applied, lateral to the SWNT film layer, and a so-called whole cell patch clamp used to measure any electrical effect on the nerve cells. When a lateral voltage is applied, a relatively large current is carried along the surface but only a very small current, in the region of billionths of an amp, is passed across the film to the nerve cells. The net effect is a kind of reverse amplification of the applied voltage that stimulates the nerve cells without damaging them.

Kotov and his colleagues report that such devices might find use in pain management, for instance, where nerve cells involved in the pain response might be controlled by reducing the activity of those cells. An analogous device might be used conversely to stimulate failed motor neurons, nerve cells that control muscle contraction. The researchers also suggest that stimulation could be applied to heart muscle cells to stimulate the heart.

They caution that a great deal of work is yet to be carried out before such devices become available to the medical profession.

Author: Nicholas A. Kotov, University of Michigan (USA), http://www.engin.umich.edu/dept/che/research/kotov/

Title: Stimulation of Neural Cells by Lateral Currents in Conductive Layer-by-Layer Films of Single-Walled Carbon Nanotubes

Advanced Materials 2006, 18, No. 22, doi: 10.1002/adma.200600878

Other Headlines from Wiley InterScience ...
 - All Smoothed Out - Hydroxyl radicals remove nanoscopic irregularities on polished gold surfaces
 - Molecular Freight: Synthetic nanoscale transport system modeled on nature
 - Fast, easy, and highly sensitive arsenic detection with gold nanoparticles
 - Atomic Wire with Protective Sheath
 - Bismuth-catalyzed growth of tin sulfide nanotubes

More Nanotubes Headlines ...
 - Gecko's lessons transfer well
 - Unidym Completes Licensing Agreements to Expand Use of its Carbon Nanotube IP in Diverse Array of Applications
 - Harnessing the Divas of the Nanoworld
 - Paper strips can quickly detect toxin in drinking water
 - Brewer Science and SouthWest NanoTechnologies Announce $6.5M NIST TIP Award to Produce Low-Cost, High-Quality Metallic and Semiconducting Single-Wall Carbon Nanotube Inks


  Featured Deal


Shop For

Digital Cameras
Canon PowerShot SD1200 IS / Digital IXUS 95 IS Digital Camera Products
10.3 Megapixel, Compact Camera, 2.5 in. LCD Screen, 3x Optical Zoom, With Video Capability, Weight: 0.26 lb.
$149.99
Buy it at Sears
$179.00
Buy it at Dell
$179.97
Buy it at P.C. Richard & Son
$239.95
Buy it at HSN
$139.95
Buy it at Amazon Marketplace
5 Store Offers from $140-$240
« Back To List »

« GET LISTED »
- submit company
- submit news
- submit events
- advertise here

« EVENTS »
Nano tech 2010 International Nanotechnology Exhibition & Conference - Japan
The worlds largest nanotechnology exhibition and conference presents the latest nanotechnology developments in Tokyo.

2010 International Conference On Nanoscience and Nanotechnology
ICONN 2010 will cover nanostructure growth, synthesis, fabrication, characterisation, device design, modelling, testing and applications.

2nd NanoImpactNet Conference
For a healthy environment in a future with nanotechnology.

NanoSpain2010
Nanoscience and Nanotechnology Conference

- More Events


Copyright © 2010 Nanotechwire.com | Privacy Policy |