| Silver
Bullet
Nanoparticles
of the metal can prevent blood clots
Blood clots are a common cause of heart
attacks, strokes and coronary arterial diseases. Clots block
arteries, choke blood and oxygen supply to tissues, thus killing
them. The way to deal with this is to take anticoagulants,
like aspirin and heparin, which thin the blood. But in large
doses they can cause excessive bleeding. However, sedentary
lifestyle and high incidences of these diseases have increased
the use of such drugs.
Siddhartha Shrivastava and his colleagues
at the department of biochemistry, Banaras Hindu University,
Varanasi, have found an alternative to these drugs. They have
used ultra fine silver particles called nanoparticles to inhibit
platelets, cells that aggregate to form clots. Nanoparticles
can have a diameter as small as a billionth of a metre.
Usually, nanoparticles are used to deliver
medicines, in the proper doses, to specific tissues. But silver
nanoparticles have the innate property of inhibiting platelets.
Shrivastavas experiment showed over 80 per cent inhibition
of platelet activity in tissues injected with nanoparticles
at high concentrations. At the same concentration, the inhibition
of platelet activity in diabetes patients not dependent on
insulin was 50 per cent, found the study published in the
June 23 issue of ACS Nano.
Since nanoparticles act on targeted tissues,
there is no risk of bleeding. But overexposure to nanosilver
can lead to toxicity in the liver, spleen, lungs and kidneys.
Source: Down To Earth
Date: July, 2009

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