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These gold nanotubes allow doctors to kill cancer cells on site

Once a doctor discovers that a patient has cancer it begins a long process of scheduling tests and treatments that can be quite annoying for the patient. Scientists at the University of Leeds may have found a solution to this problem that comes in the form of gold nanotubes that would allow doctors to destroy tumorous cells as soon as they spot them.

There’s no doubt that doctors would prefer to treat cancer as soon as they spot it, and it looks like nanotechnology might give them that chance. Researchers at the University of Leeds have successfully tested gold nanotubes that are useful for both imaging and destroying cancer cells. Since the tubes absorb near-infrared light frequencies, which both generate heat and render human skin transparent, you only need to zap them with lasers of varying brightness to achieve multiple ends. You can use a relatively low brightness to reveal tumors, while high brightness will heat the tubes enough to kill nearby tumorous cells. The shape also has room for drugs, so you can deliver medicine at the same time.

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Written by Rocco Penn

A tech blogger, social media analyst, and general promoter of all things positive in the world. "Bring it. I'm ready." Find me on Media Caffeine, Twitter, and Facebook.

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