DocumentCode :
2787914
Title :
Biological/medical pulsed electric field treatments
Author :
Schoenbach, Karl H. ; Stark, Robert H. ; Deng, Jingdong ; Aly, Ramy El-Sayed ; Beebe, Stephen J. ; Buescher, E Stephen
Author_Institution :
Phys. Electron. Res. Inst., Old Dominion Univ., Norfolk, VA, USA
fYear :
2000
fDate :
26-29 June 2000
Firstpage :
42
Lastpage :
46
Abstract :
The application of electric fields to a medium, which contains biological cells, causes build-up of charges at the cell membrane, and consequently a change in the transmembrane potential of cells. For low electric fields, this causes voltage-gating, the voltage-induced opening of channels in the cell membrane. With increasing electric field, at transmembrane voltages on the order of 1 V, the cell membrane becomes permeable, an effect called electroporation. It is reversible for moderate electric fields (kV/cm) and pulse duration of microseconds to milliseconds. At higher fields and/or longer pulse durations the cells will be lysed. Applications of these outer membrane effects are biofouling prevention, medical applications such as electroporative delivery of chemotherapeutic drugs into tumor cells, gene therapy, transdermal drug delivery and bacterial decontamination of drinking water and liquid food. A new type of field-cell interaction, "intracellular electromanipulation" by means of submicrosecond electrical pulses at electric fields exceeding 50 kV/cm has been recently added to known cellular bioelectric effects. The bioelectric technique, which is based on high frequency field-cell interactions, extends electroporation of the outer cell membrane to subcellular structures.
Keywords :
bioelectric phenomena; biological effects of fields; electric fields; membranes; pulsed power technology; 1 V; bacterial decontamination; biofouling prevention; biological/medical pulsed electric field treatments; cell membrane; cellular bioelectric; chemotherapeutic drugs; electroporative delivery; gene therapy; intracellular electromanipulation; medical applications; pulse duration; transdermal drug delivery; transmembrane potential; tumor cells; voltage-gating; voltage-induced channel opening; Bioelectric phenomena; Biological cells; Biomedical equipment; Biomembranes; Cells (biology); Drugs; Electric potential; Medical services; Medical treatment; Voltage;
fLanguage :
English
Publisher :
ieee
Conference_Titel :
Power Modulator Symposium, 2000. Conference Record of the 2000 Twenty-Fourth International
Conference_Location :
Norfolk, VA, USA
ISSN :
1076-8467
Print_ISBN :
0-7803-5826-0
Type :
conf
DOI :
10.1109/MODSYM.2000.896160
Filename :
896160
Link To Document :
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