Subscribe free to our newsletters via your
. Solar Energy News .




INTERN DAILY
US teenager crafts early detection tool for cancer
by Staff Writers
Long Beach, California (AFP) Feb 27, 2013


Jack Andraka catapulted from being a typical US teenager unaware of the pancreas to one with a cheap way to detect cancer in the organ before it turns deadly.

"Through the Internet, anything is possible," Andraka said while telling the story of his screening breakthrough at a prestigious TED Conference in Southern California on Wednesday.

"There is so much more to it than posting duck-face pictures of yourself online," he continued, sucking in his cheeks and pushing out his lips to playfully underscore his point.

"If a 15-year-old who didn't know what a pancreas was could figure out a way to detect pancreatic cancer, imagine what you could do."

Andraka, who turned 16 in January, recounted how three years ago he began scouring the Internet for information about pancreatic cancer after it killed a cherished family friend.

He told of being shocked to learn that the cancer was typically found too late to save people. On top of that, the test used to screen for the illness was 60 years old, he said.

"That is older than my dad," Andraka quipped. "More important, it is expensive, inaccurate, and your doctor would have to be ridiculously suspicious that you had the cancer to give you this test."

He figured what was needed was a test that was inexpensive, fast, simple and sensitive.

"Undeterred due to my teenage optimism, I went online to a teenager's two best friends: Google and Wikipedia," Andraka said.

What he found was there were thousands of proteins that could be detected in the blood of people with pancreatic cancer, and he hunted for one that could serve as an early flag for the illness.

"Finally, on the 4,000th try when I am losing my sanity, I found the protein," Andraka said.

The revelation came in what he described as an unlikely place, a high school biology class he referred to as an "absolute stifler of innovation."

"I was sneakily reading this nanotubes article under my desk while we were supposed to be paying attention to antibodies," Andraka recalled.

"Suddenly it hit me that I could combine what I was reading with what I was supposed to be thinking about."

He described a recipe for making paper sensors to detect the protein - mesothelin - in blood that is "about as simple as making chocolate chip cookies, which I love."

The test costs three cents, takes minutes, and appears to be 100 percent accurate, according to his TED Talk.

Andraka said he sent out 200 requests to scientists for lab space to continue his work, only to be rejected by all but Johns Hopkins University where he was fiercely grilled before being taken in.

He commenced to fix holes he discovered in his "once brilliant procedure" and went on to be awarded the 2012 Intel International Science and Engineering Fair grand prize.

Andraka described his approach as having the potential to be tailored to screen for other forms of cancer as well as heart disease or HIV/AIDS.

He told of currently working on "something the size of a cube of sugar" that could "look through your skin" and study blood or signs of almost any disease. The cost? An estimated five dollars.

.


Related Links
Hospital and Medical News at InternDaily.com






Comment on this article via your Facebook, Yahoo, AOL, Hotmail login.

Share this article via these popular social media networks
del.icio.usdel.icio.us DiggDigg RedditReddit GoogleGoogle








INTERN DAILY
Swine cells could power artificial liver
Washington DC (SPX) Feb 28, 2013
Chronic or acute, liver failure can be deadly. Toxins take over, the skin turns yellow and higher brain function slows. "There is no effective therapy at the moment to deal with the toxins that build up in your body," said Neil Talbot, a Research Animal Scientist for the USDA Agricultural Research Service. "Their only option now is to transplant a liver." Talbot thinks a line of spec ... read more


INTERN DAILY
The impact of algae parasite on algae biofuel output

Engineering cells for more efficient biofuel production

Avoiding virus dangers in 'domesticating' wild plants for biofuel use

U.S. grasslands losing to biofuel crops

INTERN DAILY
Brown researchers build robotic bat wing

Japan robot suit gets global safety certificate

Lessons from cockroaches could inform robotics

Simplified brain lets the iCub robot learn language

INTERN DAILY
Rethinking wind power

Global wind energy capacity grows 19 percent in 2012

Finding the right space for offshore wind turbines

Spotting the invisible cracks in wind turbines

INTERN DAILY
Study: Left-hand turn, cellphone don't mix

Formula E: China Racing join all-electric Formula E line-up

Mobile apps reshape urban taxi landscape

Estonia plugs electric cars as power prices soar

INTERN DAILY
Iran's oil output faces long-term decline

China has no need for U.S. coal?

France seeks to boost marine energy

U.S. oil needs should keep it in Mideast

INTERN DAILY
Two workers die in fall at French nuclear plant

Areva narrows loss, targets profit in 2013

Safety concerns cloud S. Korea nuclear drive

Taiwan to vote on nuclear facility

INTERN DAILY
S.Africa to introduce carbon tax from 2015

Nation Could Double Energy Productivity

China energy consumption rises 3.9% in 2012

Beijing's Pollution Alarms Neighbors

INTERN DAILY
Declining Vegetation Across The Eastern US Observed

Russia moves to shut down Lake Baikal paper mill

Turkmenistan to plant 3 million trees to make desert bloom

Decoys could blunt spread of ash-killing beetles




The content herein, unless otherwise known to be public domain, are Copyright 1995-2014 - Space Media Network. AFP, UPI and IANS news wire stories are copyright Agence France-Presse, United Press International and Indo-Asia News Service. ESA Portal Reports are copyright European Space Agency. All NASA sourced material is public domain. Additional copyrights may apply in whole or part to other bona fide parties. Advertising does not imply endorsement,agreement or approval of any opinions, statements or information provided by Space Media Network on any Web page published or hosted by Space Media Network. Privacy Statement