Born to Engineer - Biomedical bubbles with Eleanor Stride

Views 41

"If I were to say that the complexity of what we do is the same as the complexity of designing a car, I wouldn't be exaggerating."

Since 2007 biomedical engineer Eleanor Stride has been designing a revolutionary new method of delivering drugs by injecting tiny microbubbles into the bloodstream.

Traditional drug delivery through pills or injection send the active agent through the bloodstream meaning that a high percentage of cells in the body are exposed to the drug. In contrast, the targetted delivery mechanism with bubbles aims to release the drugs only when they reach the part of the body where they are needed.

Some of the bubbles are magnetic and the research team is using groundbreaking techniques developed by the Davy Faraday Research Laboratory at the Royal Institution to control the movement and activation of the bubbles within the body.

This drug delivery method has the potential to avoid the widespread destruction of healthy cells that is presently unavoidable with chemotherapy, which would revolutionise the future treatment of cancer sufferers.

The film was produced by Duckrabbit for the ERA Foundation as part of a pilot scheme to demonstrate how engineering is changing lives and how the world works. Ultimately, the project aims to attract young people towards engineering education and careers.

Music: Julsy - Morning Sunshine
Chris Zabriskie - The Temperature of the Air on the Bow of the Kaleeta, That Kid in Fourth Grade Who Really Liked the Denver Broncos
The Kyoto Connection - Hachiko (The Faithful Dog)

Watch more science videos on the Ri Channel http://richannel.org

The Ri is on Twitter: http://twitter.com/ri_science
and Facebook: http://www.facebook.com/royalinstitution
Subscribe for the latest science videos: http://richannel.org/newsletter

Share This Video


Download

  
Report form