Hydrogen peroxide may be disease indicator

Published: Aug. 21, 2007 at 3:12 PM

ATLANTA, Aug. 21 (UPI) -- U.S. scientists have, for the first time, imaged hydrogen peroxide in animals as an early indicator of disease.

Georgia Institute of Technology and Emory University researchers created a nanoparticle capable of detecting and imaging trace amounts of hydrogen peroxide in animals. The scientists said such non-toxic nanoparticles might be used as a simple, all-purpose diagnostic tool to detect the earliest stages of any chronic inflammatory disease, such as cancer, Alzheimer’s disease and arthritis.

Hydrogen peroxide is thought to be over-produced by cells during the early stages of most diseases. But since there have been no imaging techniques available to capture that process in the body, details of how hydrogen peroxide is produced and its role in a developing disease must still be determined.

"These nanoparticles are incredibly sensitive so you can detect nanomolar concentrations of hydrogen peroxide," said Niren Murthy of Georgia Tech. "That’s important because researchers aren’t yet certain what amounts of hydrogen peroxide are present in various diseases."

The research led by Murthy and Robert Taylor at Emory University will appear in journal Nature Materials.

© 2007 United Press International, Inc. All Rights Reserved.
Order reprints



Additional News Stories
Flyers fire Coach John Stevens (14 min)
Boston developer reaching for the sun
Notre Dame pulls out of bowl picture
Oldest python in captivity dead at 43
Mother gives birth aboard airplane
Dallas man ordered to lose fake grass
CDC: H1N1 Guillain-Barre syndrome remote
fark
Five children go 11 days without food while mother makes no effort to look for job: "We were supposed...
Comcast may kill NBC, but cable will never kill Tom Brokaw
Be vewy quiet, we're hunting mugshots
College student achieves dream of sitting around and eating pizza for the rest of her life
Listen my children and you shall hear: the midnight ride of the mystery meth tweeker of good cheer...
TSA head believes screeners should be allowed to unionize, because hey, it's not like they can get...