• DocumentCode
    918498
  • Title

    Bioelectric Effects of Intense Nanosecond Pulses

  • Author

    Schoenbach, Karl H. ; Hargrave, Barbara ; Joshi, Ravindra P. ; Kolb, Juergen F. ; Nuccitelli, Richard ; Osgood, Christopher ; Pakhomov, Andrei ; Stacey, Michael ; Swanson, R. James ; White, Jody A. ; Xiao, Shu ; Zhang, Jue ; Beebe, Stephen J. ; Blackmore,

  • Author_Institution
    Old Dominion Univ., Norfolk
  • Volume
    14
  • Issue
    5
  • fYear
    2007
  • fDate
    10/1/2007 12:00:00 AM
  • Firstpage
    1088
  • Lastpage
    1109
  • Abstract
    Electrical models for biological cells predict that reducing the duration of applied electrical pulses to values below the charging time of the outer cell membrane (which is on the order of 100 ns for mammalian cells) causes a strong increase in the probability of electric field interactions with intracellular structures due to displacement currents. For electric field amplitudes exceeding MV/m, such pulses are also expected to allow access to the cell interior through conduction currents flowing through the permeabilized plasma membrane. In both cases, limiting the duration of the electrical pulses to nanoseconds ensures only nonthermal interactions of the electric field with subcellular structures. This intracellular access allows the manipulation of cell functions. Experimental studies, in which human cells were exposed to pulsed electric fields of up to 300 kV/cm amplitude with durations as short as 3 ns, have confirmed this hypothesis and have shown that it is possible to selectively alter the behavior and/or survival of cells. Observed nanosecond pulsed effects at moderate electric fields include intracellular release of calcium and enhanced gene expression, which could have long term implications on cell behavior and function. At increased electric fields, the application of nanosecond pulses induces a type of programmed cell death, apoptosis, in biological cells. Cell survival studies with 10 ns pulses have shown that the viability of the cells scales inversely with the electrical energy density, which is similar to the "dose" effect caused by ionizing radiation. On the other hand, there is experimental evidence that, for pulses of varying durations, the onset of a range of observed biological effects is determined by the electrical charge that is transferred to the cell membrane during pulsing. This leads to an empirical similarity law for nanosecond pulse effects, with the product of electric field intensity, pulse duration, and the square root of the numb- er of pulses as the similarity parameter. The similarity law allows one not only to predict cell viability based on pulse parameters, but has also been shown to be applicable for inducing platelet aggregation, an effect which is triggered by internal calcium release. Applications for nanosecond pulse effects cover a wide range: from a rather simple use as preventing biofouling in cooling water systems, to advanced medical applications, such as gene therapy and tumor treatment. Results of this continuing research are leading to the development of wound healing and skin cancer treatments, which are discussed in some detail.
  • Keywords
    biochemistry; bioelectric phenomena; biological effects of fields; biomembranes; biomolecular effects of radiation; calcium; cancer; cellular effects of radiation; patient treatment; physiological models; tumours; bioelectric effects; biofouling; biological cells; cell apoptosis; cell death; cell functions; cell manipulation; cell survival; cell viability; conduction currents; cooling water systems; electric field interaction; electrical energy density; electrical models; gene expression; gene therapy; intense nanosecond electrical pulses; intracellular calcium release; intracellular structures; nonthermal interactions; outer cell membrane; permeabilized plasma membrane; platelet aggregation; skin cancer treatments; subcellular structures; tumor treatment; wound healing; Bioelectric phenomena; Biological cells; Biological system modeling; Biomembranes; Calcium; Cells (biology); Humans; Nanobioscience; Plasmas; Predictive models;
  • fLanguage
    English
  • Journal_Title
    Dielectrics and Electrical Insulation, IEEE Transactions on
  • Publisher
    ieee
  • ISSN
    1070-9878
  • Type

    jour

  • DOI
    10.1109/TDEI.2007.4339468
  • Filename
    4339468