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Hyperthermia with rotating magnetic nanowires inducing heat into tumor by fluid friction
- Publisher :
- American Institute of Physics
-
Abstract
- A magnetic hyperthermia cancer treatment strategy that does not operate by means of conventional heating mechanisms is presented. The proposed approach consists of injecting a gel with homogeneously distributed magnetic nanowires into a tumor. Upon the application of a low-frequency rotating or circularly polarized magnetic field, nanowires spin around their center of viscous drag due to torque generated by shape anisotropy. As a result of external rotational forcing and fluid friction in the nanoparticle's boundary layer, heating occurs. The nanowire dynamics is theoretically and experimentally investigated, and different feasibility proofs of the principle by physical modeling, which adhere to medical guidelines, are presented. The magnetic nanorotors exhibit rotations and oscillations with quite a steady center of gravity, which proves an immobile behavior and guarantees a time-independent homogeneity of the spatial particle distribution in the tumor. Furthermore, a fluid dynamic and thermodynamic heating model is briefly introduced. This model is a generalization of Penne's model that for this method reveals theoretic heating rates that are sufficiently high, and fits well into medical limits defined by present standards.
- Subjects :
- 010302 applied physics
Materials science
Nanowires
Nanowire
General Physics and Astronomy
Nanotechnology
02 engineering and technology
Mechanics
021001 nanoscience & nanotechnology
01 natural sciences
Biomagnetism
Magnetic field
Boundary layer
Magnetic hyperthermia
Biomedical modeling
Drag
Magnetic fields
0103 physical sciences
Homogeneity (physics)
0210 nano-technology
Anisotropy
Cancer
Subjects
Details
- Database :
- OpenAIRE
- Accession number :
- edsair.doi.dedup.....15719a9a2d5cd48b34629771a9271db6