- Aster DM Healthcare
Transcription
- Aster DM Healthcare
The giant strides made in today’s medical field is at the tiniest levels and hence surely ‘Small is Big’ By: Dr. Harish Pillai T he issue of miniaturisation of physical matter has been dreamt about since long. In the 19th Century, Otto Klement and Jerome Bixby wrote a story that was adapted into a screen play by Harry Kleiner in 1966 for the sci-fi movie ‘Fantastic Voyage’, wherein a crew of humans and their submarine were miniaturised and injected using normal saline (intravenous) fluid into the blood stream of a patient who was a renowned scientist afflicted with a stroke in his brain. The mission of the crew was to navigate the blood vessels and reach the site of the clot and use lasers to remove the clot and resume blood supply. In the course of the movie, in typical Hollywood style, the crew had a very www.healthbizindia.in Small is Big! long anatomical detour and a dangerous adventure due to an arterio-venous anomaly (hole) in the heart; an element of cold war tension was also injected into the plot with characters representing both Soviet and American interests! This screenplay was taken by the celebrated sci-fi writer Issac Assimov and made into a novel that was published 6 months prior to the release of the movie. The other two Health Biz India January 2016 37 main stream motion pictures based on the same theme were ‘Innerspace’ in 1987 and ‘Antibody’ in 2002. Hard science buffs like Assimov had doctrinal issues with the breaking of fundamental laws of Physics, but still went with the flow of thoughts in the quest to increase the mass appeal for science and nano technology. The first postulation There exists a plan to use carbon based diamondoid nanometer structures using positional assembly almost atom by atom From the era of pop culture to real science, the first scientist to postulate the medical application of nano or very small devices was the late Nobel Laureate physicist Richard P Feynman. In his land mark lecture in 1959 ‘There’s plenty of room at the bottom’, he postulated employing machine tools to make still smaller tools and so on all the way down to the atomic level. He, in fact, offered the first known medical application of nano robotic surgery by stating the wild possibility of ‘swallowing the surgeon’ into the blood vessels who will look around and find out the problem area and take a little knife and slice it out! Thus, when we describe nano technology today we refer to microscopically small tools, which are molecular devices and nano medicine is the application of this nano technology to medicine. Micro bots & more The current exploits in research labs world over use an array of tools ranging from dendrimers, buckyballs and nano shells to target specific tissues and organs. These devices can serve both diagnostics and therapeutic functions. The 38 Health Biz India January 2016 several attempts to build micro bots have resulted in fascinating products. In 2002 at the Tokyo University a research group created tiny magnetically driven spinning screws that will swim through the blood vessels to deliver drugs to infected tissues or even drill at tumour sites with the intent of killing them. In 2003, the ‘MR Sub’ of Ecole Polytechnique in Montreal tested a micro bot that had ferrous elements embedded within and facilitated controlled navigation using the variable electro magnetic fields generated by an MRI. By 2005, the original idea proposed by the sci-fi movie ‘Fantastic Voyage’ became a reality in a sense when Brad Nelson’s team at the Swiss Federal Institute of Technology fabricated a microscopic robot small enough to be injected into the body using a syringe. Visualising nano Nano engineering is a dynamic and fast growing field and the manufacturing techniques being postulated will surely revolutionise the assembly line manufacturing of nano devices by 2020. One needs to visualise the entire process at a sub atomic level or at least atomic level. There exists a plan to use carbon based diamondoid nanometer Experimental applications have already tried using ‘nano scissors’ to cut a dendrite from a single neuron without damaging the cell structures using positional assembly almost atom by atom to design and build a wide range of nano machine parts such as onboard sensors, motors, power supplies, molecular computers, gears etc. These structures have already been created virtually using super computers and the theoretical models called Diamond mechano synthesis – DMS and is being fine tuned for rapid application. Nano drones About the author Dr. Harish Pillai is the CEO of Aster Medcity, a USD 300 million greenfield medical township project in Kochi and Cluster Head - Kerala Aster DM Health Care. Apart from his management skills, Dr. Pillai is a sci-fi enthusiast, which gives him an extraordinary insight into the future of healthcare. In this exclusive column, he will present his thoughts on where the healthcare industry is heading and how technology will play an even greater role in the same. 40 Health Biz India January 2016 The range of clinical possibilities and impact is immeasurable and will revolutionise the future of medicine and surgery. One can visualise nano scavenger drones hovering within the blood stream constantly on the look out for pathogenic and tumour cells and swallowing them almost like the great whale habit of ingesting Krill (a very small marine organism) using a technique called ‘filter feeding’ by swimming towards large schools of krill and keeping it’s mouth open. These nano robots will act as artificial phagocytes and will only produce as effluents harmless sugars, amino acids after completely digesting the harmful cells. The immediate impact of such a drone is to fight one of the commonest cause of ICU deaths world wide – anti biotic resistant Sepsis or systemic infection due to a bacteria or other infective agents. The usual prolonged length of ICU stay can be dramatically cut short using such nano drones in the fight against infection. The other most popular conceptual use of nano drones is the precision delivery of drugs at the target cells, thus helping to prevent damage to healthy cells. This has wide application in the treatment of cancers by delivering chemo therapeutic agents, the impact could be the advent of aggressive therapy and cutting short systemic side effects in addition to cutting short the length of stay. The surgical nanobots introduced into the blood stream can be a ‘slave master robot’ like the current Da Vinci Surgical system or it can be an intelligent autonomous surgeon with vast quantum of anatomical and pathological knowledge embedded in its onboard nano computer. Such a device could perform both diagnostic and therapeutic function. Experimental applications have already tried using ‘nano scissors’ to cut a dendrite from a single neuron without damaging the cell. Even nano surgery of individual chromosomes is possible without damaging cell viability. The future nanobot will be able to find and eliminate cancerous cells; remove micro vascular obstructions and recondition the endothelial lining and making the vessel more youthful. The days of modern day surgeons and interventionalists are surely numbered with the rapid growth of nano technology. The giant strides made in today’s medical field is at the tiniest levels and hence surely ‘Small is Big’.