From Deseret News archives:
Y. engineers are zooming in on cancer
Instrument may gauge the health of human tissue
"It's basically measuring the resistance to an applied voltage. Cancerous tissue has a different resistance when it's measured," said Aaron Hawkins, associate professor of electrical and computer engineering at Brigham Young University, who has been working on the project.
The goal is to hone the instrument, as yet unnamed, to the point where it could examine living cells to learn many things, including how the cells respond to particular medical treatments.
The project started because another assistant professor of electrical engineering, Travis Oliphant, wanted to look at cells "all the way down to the cellular level, to detect things you couldn't normally see with an optical microscope," Hawkins said. "He wanted to measure, for instance, what water flow looks like within a cell. We think water would have different electrical properties at different parts of the cell. To see that, you have to see very, very small features."
Pathologists use stains to differentiate cancerous and healthy tissue. And the cells are all dead at the time. The prototype instrument they've created uses a completely different marker system based on the variations in resistance to the electrical voltage. Because of that, it can be applied to live cells, not just dead ones.
Because cancer resists voltage differently than healthy tissues, their technology, which creates black and white images, shows previously unseen aspects of the tissue or anything else being examined, Hawkins said.
"The real goal is to get down to looking at individual cells. If we can make that work, we can unlock a lot of things in biology that are a mystery in how cells function and communicate, inside the cell itself."
He said there's so much to learn about how cells work that "we don't even know what questions to ask yet."
At its current capability, he said, "I could see it being used for biopsies, looking at tissue slices and trying to determine whether something is healthy or not. But we're not really pursuing that that heavily. We are more interested in going to a smaller and smaller scale."
Oliphant told the BYU news service it might help overcome a barrier in diagnosing illness.
Comments
- SEC widens BofA, Merrill probe 1:48 p.m.
- 6 suspended in ignored patient case 1:37 p.m.
- New Irish coach Brian Kelly 1:10 p.m.
- Wall Street regulatory overhaul 1:08 p.m.
- Health care tab to keep growing 12:57 p.m.
- Dr. explains Mitchell review change 12:50 p.m.
- Choir event 'experience to remember' 12:48 p.m.
- Cable falls on I-80, closing lanes 12:36 p.m.
- Iraq blasted over Iran exile treatment 12:27 p.m.
- Draft: Rich nations' emission cuts 12:19 p.m.
- Letters: Global warming a lie
263 - TCU to play Boise in Fiesta Bowl
207 - BYU football: Bronco weighs in on Hall
194 - Palin signs books, chats with fans
169 - Utah/BYU rivalry can be more civil
151 - Cougars going back to Vegas
150 - Andersen apologizes for Jordan hoax
142 - Nude bathers cited for lewdness
131 - Max Hall wants to look ahead
128 - Jazz fall apart late at L.A.
110
David Rankin, one of Utah's youngest and ablest astrophotographers has...
There was a time when free shipping was rare. This holiday season, you...
Love him or hate him, Utah Sen. Orrin Hatch knows how to get attention.
I think we all know the real reason that violence against women is such a...
@Agki 4:39 a.m.: "There are hundreds more that a short literature review...
"It's possible to be fooled. … I don't think it happened here," Skeem...
9?? did I read right, 9?? why was this guy ever let out after 4 or 5?
wow, that was intelligent. Radioactive material is responsible for a good...
#1 "The quickest and broadast tax cut ever" is the "Reinvestment and Recovery...
Apparently Skeem doesn't understand the role dishonesty and narcissism can...
@12:08 - The tithing of the church pays for buildings, teaching materials,...
Chuck said, "I would like to quote a simple verse from the Bible: "By...
I hate Max Hall. I hate everything about him. Touche



You can be the first to comment on this story.