Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
3454265 | Asian Pacific Journal of Tropical Disease | 2012 | 4 Pages |
Nanoparticle research is currently an area of intense scientific interest due to a wide variety of potential applications. Human beings have been exposed to airborne nanosized particles throughout their evolutionary stages, and such exposures have increased dramatically over the last century. Nanoparticle can modify the physicochemical properties of the material as well as create the opportunity for increased uptake and interaction with biological tissues through inhalation, ingestion, and injection. This combination of effects can generate adverse biological effects in living cells. Nanoparticles have proved toxic to human once in the blood stream, nanoparticles, spleen, bone marrow and nervous system can be transported around the body and be taken up by organs tissue and cell cultures, resulting in increased oxidative stress, inflammatory cytokine production and cell death. Unlike larger particles, nanoparticles may be taken up by cell mitochondria and the cell nucleus studies demonstrate the potential for nanoparticles to cause DNA mutation and induce major structural damage to mitochondria, even resulting in cell death. Size is therefore a key factor in determining the potential toxicity of a particle. How these nanoparticles behave inside the body is still a major question that needs to be resolved. There is a responsibility to test and optimize these new nanomaterials early during the development process to eliminate or ameliorate identified toxic characteristics.