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Nanotechnology,
the 'science of small things' is set to bring huge
advantages in engineering, electronics, medicine and
IT-- but the potential threats to health that widespread
use of nanoparticles could bring need to be scrutinised,
says a University of Edinburgh expert in this month's
edition of Occupational and Environmental Medicine.
Professor Ken Donaldson, a lung toxicology expert
and Professor of Respiratory Medicine at the University,
calls for a new discipline--nanotoxicology-- to be
built up, to address knowledge gaps and to help develop
a safe nanotechnology. He wants guidelines to be developed
to test all materials in the nanoscale where human
health could be involved.
Professor Donaldson says: "We believe that efforts
to untangle science and science fiction regarding
the risks from nanotechnology are needed and that
a focus on the potential harmful effects of nanoparticles
is both timely and necessary. The importance of nanotechnology
to the economy and to our future wellbeing is beyond
debate, but its potential adverse impacts need to
be studied along the same lines. A discipline of nanotoxicology
would make an important contribution to the development
of a sustainable and safe nanotechnology .
He added: "Our current knowledge of the toxicology
of nanoparticles and nanotubes (tiny carbon tubes)
is poor but suggests that nanoparticles may be able
to have undesirable effects at their point of entry
into the body, for example, the lungs, and might also
be able to affect other organs. Nanoparticles in food
may cross into the gut lymphatic system and so reach
other organs more easily than larger particles do.
Inhaled nanoparticles have been reported to travel
from nasal nerves to the brain, a phenomenon seen
with some viruses similar in size to nanoparticles."
Nanoparticles, materials the size of millionths of
a millimetre, are already present in large numbers
in the air from natural sources and from vehicle exhaust
emissions. They are also found in sunblocks, boot
polish, tyres and photocopier toner. In future, however,
they may be used in clothing manufacture, to purify
water, clean up contaminated ground, deliver drugs
to specific parts of the body or be used as tiny security
sensors.
Contact: Linda Menzies
linda.menzies@ed.ac.uk
44-131-650-6382
University of Edinburgh
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