Posted on 01/08/2020 6:45:39 AM PST by cann
Doctors have used focused ultrasound to destroy tumors without invasive surgery for some time. However, the therapeutic ultrasound used in clinics today indiscriminately damages cancer and healthy cells alike.
Most forms of ultrasound-based therapies either use high-intensity beams to heat and destroy cells or special contrast agents that are injected prior to ultrasound, which can shatter nearby cells. Heat can harm healthy cells as well as cancer cells, and contrast agents only work for a minority of tumors.
Researchers at the California Institute of Technology and City of Hope Beckman Research Institute have developed a low-intensity ultrasound approach that exploits the unique physical and structural properties of tumor cells to target them and provide a more selective, safer option. By scaling down the intensity and carefully tuning the frequency to match the target cells, the group was able to break apart several types of cancer cells without harming healthy blood cells.
Their findings, reported in Applied Physics Letters, are a new step in the emerging field called oncotripsy, the singling out and killing of cancer cells based on their physical properties.
"This project shows that ultrasound can be used to target cancer cells based on their mechanical properties," said David Mittelstein, lead author on the paper. "This is an exciting proof of concept for a new kind of cancer therapy that doesn't require the cancer to have unique molecular markers or to be located separately from healthy cells to be targeted."
A solid mechanics lab at Caltech first developed the theory of oncotripsy, based on the idea that cells are vulnerable to ultrasound at specific frequencieslike how a trained singer can shatter a wine glass by singing a specific note.
The Caltech team found at certain frequencies, low-intensity ultrasound caused the cellular skeleton of cancer cells to break down, while nearby healthy cells were unscathed.
"Just by tuning the frequency of stimulation, we saw a dramatic difference in how cancer and healthy cells responded," Mittelstein said. "There are many questions left to investigate about the precise mechanism, but our findings are very encouraging."
The researchers hope their work will inspire others to explore oncotripsy as a treatment that could one day be used alongside chemotherapy, immunotherapy, radiation and surgery. They plan to gain a better understanding of what specifically occurs in a cell impacted by this form of ultrasound.
Robert Heinlein predicted this!...............
Doctors might have their own sonic screwdriver type tool one day.
It make sense.
Everything has a unique ‘frequency’ of vibration that will cause destruction.
Like the singer and the wine glass, it will shatter.
All you have to do is find that frequency for the type of cancer cells you want to destroy................
IIRC Dr. McCoy on Star Trek used avant garde metal salt and pepper shakers to treat his patients . :)
Oe of my daily favorite website reads: https://phys.org
The technology is very close to finding a cure to cancer or at lest a treatment that will stop the progression.
Those were just diagnostic tools, IIRC.............
What’s the frequency, Kenneth?
“It make sense.
Everything has a unique frequency of vibration that will cause destruction.
Like the singer and the wine glass, it will shatter.
All you have to do is find that frequency for the type of cancer cells you want to destroy................”
Everything is sound... even light. :)
And they say low-intensity ultrasound cant harm a fetus, yet, left-handedness appears to be more common in societies using ultrasound.
My chiropractor has some manipulation tool that looks like the hypo-spray.
Resonance was one of Tesla’s biggest concepts he worked on.
I had that album.
He had great ideas, just didn’t have the technology to pursue them...................
LOL, I had no idea that was an album. :)
He just made his own technology.
CAUTION... Turn down the volume in this to 0 before clicking play...
https://www.szynalski.com/tone-generator/
The researchers hope their work will inspire others to explore oncotripsy as a treatment that could one day be used alongside chemotherapy, immunotherapy, radiation and surgery. They plan to gain a better understanding of what specifically occurs in a cell impacted by this form of ultrasound.
...
If this was as good as they claim, they would get a patent and make money. There’s more to the story, I’m sure.
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