We use cookies to understand how you use our site and to improve your experience. This includes personalizing content and advertising. To learn more, click here. By continuing to use our site, you accept our use of cookies. Cookie Policy.

Features Partner Sites Information LinkXpress hp
Sign In
Advertise with Us
IBA-Radcal

Download Mobile App




Military Nanotube Technology Developed To Save Radiation Victims

By MedImaging staff writers
Posted on 20 Feb 2008
The U.S. government has commissioned a nine-month study to determine whether a new drug based on carbon nanotubes can help prevent people from dying of acute radiation injury following radiation exposure. The new study was commissioned after preliminary tests found the drug was greater than 5,000 times more effective at reducing the effects of acute radiation injury than the most effective drugs currently available.

"More than half of those who suffer acute radiation injury die within 30 days, not from the initial radioactive particles themselves but from the devastation they cause in the immune system, the gastrointestinal tract, and other parts of the body,” said Dr. James Tour, professor of chemistry, director of Rice University (Houston, TX, USA) Carbon Nanotechnology Laboratory (CNL) and lead investigator on the grant. "Ideally, we'd like to develop a drug that can be administered within 12 hours of exposure and prevent deaths from what are currently fatal exposure doses of ionizing radiation.”

The U.S. Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency (DARPA; Arlington, VA, USA) has awarded Dr. Tour and co-principal investigators Drs. J. Conyers and Valerie Moore from the University of Texas Health Science Center at Houston (UT-Houston; USA) and Drs. Luka Milas, Kathy Mason, and Jeffrey Myers from the University of Texas M.D. Anderson Cancer Center (Houston, TX, USA) a US$540,000 grant for a nine-month study of an experimental drug that the investigators have named Nanovector Trojan Horses (NTH).

NTH is made at Rice's chemistry department and Carbon Nanotechnology Laboratory in the Richard E. Smalley Institute for Nanoscale Science and Technology. The drug is based on single-walled carbon nanotubes, hollow cylinders of pure carbon that are about as wide as a strand of DNA. To form NTH, Rice scientists coated nanotubes with two common food preservatives--the antioxidant compounds butylated hydroxyanisole (BHA) and butylated hydroxytoluene (BHT)--and derivatives of those compounds.

"The same properties that make BHA and BHT good food preservatives, namely their ability to scavenge free radicals, also make them good candidates for mitigating the biological affects that are induced through the initial ionizing radiation event,” Dr. Tour said.

In preliminary tests at M.D. Anderson in July 2007, mice showed enhanced protection when exposed to lethal doses of ionizing radiation when they were given first-generation NTH drugs before exposure. "Our preliminary results are remarkable, and that's why DARPA awarded us this grant with a very compressed timeline for delivery: nine months, which is almost unheard of for an academic study of this type,” Dr. Tour said. "They are very interested in finding out whether this will work in a post-exposure delivery, and they don't want to waste any time.”

Ionizing radiation is any form of radioactive particle or energy that converts an atom or molecule into an ion by changing the balance between the number of protons and electrons. In living organisms, ionization often results in the creation of free radicals--highly reactive molecules that can wreak havoc by disrupting healthy physiologic processes. These free radicals induce a cascade of deleterious biologic events that cause further destruction to the organism in the days and weeks after initial radiation exposure event. NTH is designed to block the destructive biologic cascade.

According to Dr. Tour, the researchers are also interested in finding out whether the new drugs can prevent the unwanted side effects that cancer patients suffer after undergoing radiation therapy.


Related Links:
Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency
University of Texas Health Science Center at Houston
University of Texas M.D. Anderson Cancer Center
Post-Processing Imaging System
DynaCAD Prostate
Ultrasound Needle Guidance System
SonoSite L25
Mammo DR Retrofit Solution
DR Retrofit Mammography
Diagnostic Ultrasound System
DC-80A

Channels

Nuclear Medicine

view channel
Image: CXCR4-targeted PET imaging reveals hidden inflammatory activity (Diekmann, J. et al., J Nucl Med (2025). DOI: 10.2967/jnumed.125.270807)

PET Imaging of Inflammation Predicts Recovery and Guides Therapy After Heart Attack

Acute myocardial infarction can trigger lasting heart damage, yet clinicians still lack reliable tools to identify which patients will regain function and which may develop heart failure.... Read more

Imaging IT

view channel
Image: The new Medical Imaging Suite makes healthcare imaging data more accessible, interoperable and useful (Photo courtesy of Google Cloud)

New Google Cloud Medical Imaging Suite Makes Imaging Healthcare Data More Accessible

Medical imaging is a critical tool used to diagnose patients, and there are billions of medical images scanned globally each year. Imaging data accounts for about 90% of all healthcare data1 and, until... Read more
Copyright © 2000-2025 Globetech Media. All rights reserved.