According to a research, it seems
that certain carbon nanotubes can cause major health problems whenever are
inhaled. This may pose at risk the lives of many people, the most exposed being
the workers in nano factories. The range of people being affected is huge,
since this element is used nowadays in wide varieties of consumer products,
such as electronic components, sporting goods, clothes.
According to Prof. Kenneth
Donaldson, professor at the University of
Edinburgh, member of the research team, “long thin structures of
nanotubes show the same effects as long thin asbestos fibres.” The latter
proved to provoke mesothelioma, a fatal form of cancer.
Whether the carbon nanotubes are
or not toxic has been one of the most pressing questions in Nanotechnology.
Several attempts to find a clear answer were made along the years. Tests on
cells have so far proved to be confusing. Some of them indicated toxicity and
others did not. The reason was the similarity between the nanotubes and certain
carbonic cell elements, which made it difficult to trace the nanotubes’
behavior. However, a recent study led by Alexandra Porter from the University of Cambridge show that once they enter a cell, nanotubes
cause cell death.
The results of this new research
show that not all nanotubes are harmful. Curly and shorter nanotubes do not
create health problems, only the long thin structures do.
However, there are some
uncertainties regarding the results. Brooke Mossman, leading professor in the
Environmental Pathology Program at the University of Vermont emphasized the
fact that the nanotubes were injected into experimental mice and not inhaled.
Additionally, nobody can be certain that in realistic conditions the same doses
are harmful.
Whatever the reply would be, one
thing is certain: once people are aware of the possible nanotubes’ dangers, they
“can work to control them.” (Prof. Donaldson)
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