NationStates Jolt Archive


Plasma Needle Could Replace Dentist's Drill

Kyronea
15-04-2008, 02:49
http://technology.newscientist.com/article/mg19125586.200-plasma-needle-could-replace-the-dentists-drill.html

I know this is from 2006, but I don't give a damn. This is just so cool! Look at the awesome potential uses for this thing.

MANY of us would go to great lengths to avoid the dentist's drill. Sticking a needle with a flaming plasma tip into your mouth may not at first strike you as much of an improvement on conventional dentistry. However, the plasma needle, which is cold and painless to the touch, could be just the panacea we have been waiting for.

The needle's creator, physicist Eva Stoffels-Adamowicz, who is based at the Eindhoven University of Technology in the Netherlands, says it could also be used to painlessly remove cancerous tissue.

Stoffels-Adamowicz came up with the idea for the needle while working with low-pressure plasmas, which are created in a vacuum. In order for the plasma to be used on people, she and her colleagues developed a plasma needle that works in air. The needle is a 50-millimetre-long tungsten wire housed in a quartz tube filled with gas. Driving a voltage through the needle generates a small plasma spark at its tip "like a children's sparkler", explains Stoffels-Adamowicz.

She and her colleagues have used the needle to generate a nitric oxide plasma, by flushing helium gas and air into the tube. The helium helps the plasma to form efficiently from air at low energies, although at this stage the researchers are unsure why. This could have medical applications because the body uses nitric oxide to fight infection and inflammation. The team found that when the nitric oxide plasma is produced using small amounts of energy and applied in short bursts, it can kill bacteria while leaving other living cells unharmed (Plasma Sources Science and Technology, vol 15, p 501).

Nitric oxide is also involved in cell messaging, so it can be used to trigger programmed cell death. Using higher-energy doses of plasma, in longer bursts, the team was able to target certain living cells and cauterise the tissue while leaving surrounding cells undamaged. "The plasma needle could be used to excise tumours or skin cancers," says Stoffels-Adamowicz. "It's surgery without cutting."

Plasma physicist Bill Graham at Queen's University Belfast, UK, is also developing medical treatments using plasma and thinks the team's development could have several uses. "The real innovation of the plasma needle is that it works in air, opening up the possibility of using plasma in new realms, like in the mouth, or in certain places inside the body."

Stoffels-Adamowicz's team are already working on a method to generate a plasma that can be sent down blood vessels via a catheter. They think that plasma therapy could one day be used to help clear blocked arteries, although it is likely to be used in dentistry much sooner, allowing Stoffels-Adamowicz to avoid the dreaded drill. "Until then, I just hope that I don't get toothache," she says.

It could be used for things other than dentistry which makes it even cooler. I love technology.
Bann-ed
15-04-2008, 03:02
I think that was one of the powerups in the 1998 version of Asteroids by Activision.

Quite effective.
Allothernamestaken
15-04-2008, 03:03
I certainly seems to have massive potential. I'm just wondering, given that it says "painless to the touch", is this something that could also be used without the risks of anaesthetics? If so, it would be an incredible boost for those who are vulnerable to the general/local.

Have to keep an eye out, see how this one develops
Mad hatters in jeans
15-04-2008, 16:47
Plasma in general is pretty cool, so this gets a thumbs up from me.
I reckon they should create a special sort of grenade which once activated would put up a temporary wall of plasma, say a few metres across, this would be invaluable for military processes, in fact a plasma wall in general would be pretty cool.
so from this post you can tell i've got a liking for military stuff, yet at the same time i know this is a bad thing to encourage.
I suppose i've got the same problem as those doomsday advocates, they state a day, get prepared, but decide to take out a pension just in case they're wrong.
Nodinia
15-04-2008, 19:18
But if you roll a 1 and it explodes, what then?
Mad hatters in jeans
15-04-2008, 19:26
But if you roll a 1 and it explodes, what then?

oh then you have to get a new plasma needle.
I can picture it now, dentist rolls a one and the client cannot have the dental surgery, due to luck of the dice.
I bet that's how some people decide things, on the roll of a di.
Gauthier
15-04-2008, 19:34
"Plasma Needle. One of the many weapons you have in your fight against the Convenant, the Flood, and Cavities.

HALO: SPARTAN Dentist. Coming soon to the XBox 360 from Bungie."
Kyronea
15-04-2008, 19:37
I certainly seems to have massive potential. I'm just wondering, given that it says "painless to the touch", is this something that could also be used without the risks of anaesthetics? If so, it would be an incredible boost for those who are vulnerable to the general/local.

Have to keep an eye out, see how this one develops
Exactly. That's why I posted it, since it's just so neat.