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Heat transfer from nanoparticles for targeted destruction of infectious organisms

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journal contribution
posted on 2024-11-15, 11:03 authored by Michael Cortie, David CortieDavid Cortie, Victoria Timchenko
Whereas the application of optically or magnetically heated nanoparticles to destroy tumours is now well established, the extension of this concept to target pathogens has barely begun. Here we examine the challenge of targeting pathogens by this means and, in particular, explore the issues of power density and heat transfer. Depending on the rate of heating, either hyperthermia or thermoablation may occur. This division of the field is fundamental and implies very different sources of excitation and heat transfer for the two modes, and different strategies for their clinical application. Heating by isolated nanoparticles and by agglomerates of nanoparticles is compared: hyperthermia is much more readily achieved with agglomerates and for large target volumes, a factor which favours magnetic excitation and moderate power densities. In contrast, destruction of planktonic pathogens is best achieved by localised thermoablation and very high power density, a scenario that is best delivered by pulsed optical excitation.

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Citation

Cortie, M. B., Cortie, D. L. & Timchenko, V. (2018). Heat transfer from nanoparticles for targeted destruction of infectious organisms. International Journal of Hyperthermia, 34 (2), 157-167.

Journal title

International Journal of Hyperthermia

Volume

34

Issue

2

Pagination

157-167

Language

English

RIS ID

123769

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