Quantcast
breaking news

Cancer Fighting Virus?

By: Monica Robins, WKYC
Updated: July 13, 2012
watch video
When you think of a virus, typically a cold or flu comes to mind.

Viruses are all around us and chances are the last time you ate your veggies, you ate a virus too.

Inside the Biomedical Engineering building at Case Western Reserve University Dr. Nicole Steinmetz and her team are taking the virus that attacks your greens and turning it into a cancer fighting time bomb.

She figured out a way to use a plant virus as a medicine container.

Open it up, put cancer fighting medicine inside, give it directions to attach to a type of cancer cell and let it go to work.

These are nanoparticles 2,000 times smaller than the width of the human hair.

"We've already shown that we can deliver these to brain tumors, breast tumors, colon cancer and prostate cancer," Dr. Steinmetz says.

When it comes to cancer treatment, nobody likes a needle or taking pills, so Dr. Steinmetz's students are also researching a way to put the virus back into its natural element, like salad greens and patients could eat their medicine for dinner.

"Plant viruses can be regarded as safe from a human health perspective they are naturally in the food chain so we've eaten plant viruses before," Dr. Steinmetz says.

But there's a big difference between eating some in your food and injecting a large amount container a cancer fighting medicine.

"We still need to evaluate potential side effects. They go to the tumor but where else do they go?" Dr. Steinmetz says.

The research is being done in mice right now and is showing potential, but it may take several years before it's ready for human trials.

Comments

Readers Feel...

hello
Related Content

Snyder locals ran away from the law Saturday morning as part of a 5K fundraiser for Snyder police officer Darrel Campbell, who was seriously injured by a gun shot wound almost two years ago. The 5K,...

Many parents say they don't agree with the viewpoints being taught through CSCOPE....

Spraying...braiding...curling... painting and powdering -- The girls in this room might have special needs, but for their special prom? They're getting ready the same way as everyone else, just a...

Sexually transmitted diseases are a serious problem nationwide, and local doctors tell us that here in the Big Country is no exception. But discussing that private information is usually left behind...

Mike Benning, a Massachusetts man, has become the first person in the country to have the i-Limb, the newest bionic hand on the market....

A recent Consumer Reports survey of more than 1,600 adult smartphone users found nearly 40 percent don't bother to take the minimal steps to secure them with simple password protection. Experts...

It is Ride Your Bike to School and Work Day, and a lot of the students at Dyess rode their bikes to school, but the lessons did not stop with the kids....

Near record high temperatures expected for Friday afternoon after a mild start to the day. The foretasted high in Abilene is 102, while the record for the date is 101....

Puddles are the perfect breeding ground for mosquitoes, so experts say if you want to help out in getting rid of the West Nile Virus, clear out any standing water near your home....

The first year of a baby's life can be exhausting for parents, but is filled with growth and exploration for the child. Here are some developmental milestones you can expect in babies first...

 
Find Articles Here
 
Start
      Page 1 of 640
 
Search BigCountryHomepage.com