62nd Annual Gaseous Electronics Conference
Volume 54, Number 12
Tuesday–Friday, October 20–23, 2009;
Saratoga Springs, New York
Session SR1: Biological and Emerging Applications II
10:00 AM–11:45 AM,
Thursday, October 22, 2009
Saratoga Hilton
Room: Ballroom 1
Chair: Magnus Bergkvist, College of Nanscale Science and Engineering, University at Albany
Abstract ID: BAPS.2009.GEC.SR1.1
Abstract: SR1.00001 : Cold atmospheric plasma sterilization: from bacteria to biomolecules
10:00 AM–10:30 AM
Preview Abstract
Abstract
Author:
Michael Kong
(Centre for Biological Engineering and Dept of Electronic and Electrical Engineering, Loughborough University)
Although ionized gases have been known to have biological effects
for more than 100 years, their impact on the practice in
healthcare service became very significant only recently. Today,
plasma-based surgical tools are used for tissue reduction and
blood coagulation as surgical procedures. Most significant
however is the speed at which low-temperature gas plasmas are
finding new applications in medicine and biology, including
plasma sterilization, wound healing, and cancer therapies just to
name a few. In the terminology of biotechnology, the ``pipeline''
is long and exciting.
This presentation reviews the current status of the field with a
particular emphasis on plasma inactivation of microorganisms and
biomolecules, for which comprehensive scientific evidence has
been obtained. Some of the early speculations of biocidal plasma
species are now being confirmed through a combination of optical
emission spectroscopy, laser-induced fluorescence, mass
spectrometry, fluid simulation and biological sensing with
mutated bacteria. Similarly, fundamental studies are being
performed to examine cell components targeted by gas plasmas,
from membrane, through lipid and membrane proteins, to DNA.
Scientific challenge is significant, as the usual complexity of
plasma dynamics and plasma chemistry is compounded by the added
complication that cells are live and constantly evolving.
Nevertheless, the current understanding of plasma inactivation
currently provides strong momentum for plasma decontamination
technologies to be realized in healthcare. We will discuss the
issue of protein and tissue contaminations of surgical
instruments and how cold atmospheric plasmas may be used to
degrade and reduce their surface load.
In the context of plasma interaction with biomolecules, we will
consider recent data of plasma degradation of adhesion proteins
of melanoma cells. These adhesion proteins are important for
cancer cell migration and spread. If low-temperature plasmas
could be used to degrade them, it could form a control strategy
for cancer spread. This adds to the option of plasma-triggered
programmed cell death (apoptosis). Whilst opportunities thus
highlighted are significant and exciting, the underpinning
science poses many open questions.
The presentation will then discuss main requirements for plasma
sources appropriate for their biomedical applications, in terms
of the scope of up-scaling, the ability to treat uneven surfaces
of varying materials, the range of plasma chemistry, and the
control of plasma instabilities. Finally a perspective will be
offered, in terms of both opportunities and challenges.
To cite this abstract, use the following reference: http://meetings.aps.org/link/BAPS.2009.GEC.SR1.1