2 results match your criteria: "Institute ofBiomedical Engineering[Affiliation]"

Encapsulation of magnetotactic bacteria for targeted and controlled delivery of anticancer agents for tumor therapy.

Annu Int Conf IEEE Eng Med Biol Soc

August 2012

NanoRobotics Laboratory, Department of Computer and Software Engineering, Institute ofBiomedical Engineering, École Polytechnique de Montréal, Montréal, Canada.

We showed that magnetotactic bacteria (MTB) have great potentials to be used as microcarriers for targeted delivery of therapeutic agents. Indeed, magnetotaxis inherent in MTB can be exploited to direct them towards a tumor while being propelled by their own flagellated molecular motors. Nonetheless, although the thrust propelling force above 4 pN of the MC-1 MTB showed to be superior compared to other technologies for displacement in the microvasculature, MTB becomes much less efficient when travelling in larger blood vessels due to higher blood flow.

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A computational fluid dynamics (CFD) model is presented to simulate the removal of lipid particles from blood using a novel ultrasonic quarter-wavelength separator. The Lagrangian-Eulerian CFD model accounts for conservation of mass and momentum, for the presence of lipid particles of a range of diameters, for the acoustic force as experienced by the particles in the blood, as well as for gravity and other particle-fluid interaction forces. In the separator, the liquid flows radially inward within a fluid chamber formed between a disc-shaped transducer and a disc-shaped reflector.

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