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Results 151 - 160 of 273 for Nanomedicine
  • Article - 26 Sep 2023
    In this article, Xenocs explains how SAXS measurements can be used to observe structural differences between lipid nanoparticles with and without RNA, with many exciting applications in the drug...
  • Article - 10 Mar 2020
    Silver is a well-known antimicrobial and antibacterial agent, and is most commonly used in its bulk forms as silver ions or silver salts. However, because nanoforms are known to be more active than...
  • Article - 9 Jan 2020
    The study of cell-nanoparticle interactions is vital for researchers specializing in the fields of nanomedicine and nanotoxicology. In nanotoxicology, the quantity of nanoparticles internalized by the...
  • Article - 29 Jun 2018
    The field of DNA nanotechnology was invented by American nanotechnologist and crystallographer Nadrian C. Seeman – also known as Ned – in the early 1980s. Seeman realised that a three-dimensional...
  • Article - 18 Dec 2017
    Tribology is the science of wear, friction and lubrication which has been utilized in biomedical applications. Medical grade metals and alloys can provide internal support in the body and are...
  • Article - 21 Nov 2017
    Nanorobotics describes the technology of producing machines or robots at the nanoscale. 'Nanobot' is an informal term to refer to engineered nano machines.
  • Article - 13 Nov 2017
    The use of nanotechnology in medicine, a field otherwise known as “nanomedicine,” is spreading rapidly, particularly in applications that involve the improvement of current drug delivery methods.
  • Article - 1 Nov 2017
    Nanotechnology has vast potential to transform the field of medicine. By creating nanoscale machines small enough to transverse inside the blood stream, disease and traumatic injuries can be diagnosed...
  • Article - 30 Oct 2017
    Nanotechnology is used for tissue engineering and regenerative medicine by designing objects with biochemical, mechanical and electrical properties.
  • Article - 30 Oct 2017
    Nanotechnology can benefit medicine by creating nanoscale machines small enough to transverse inside the blood stream to help cure disease and trauma.

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