posted on 2010-06-03, 15:41authored byMichael G. Kong, G. Kroesen, G.E. Morfill, T. Nosenko, T. Shimizu, J. van Dijk, J.L. Zimmermann
This introductory review on plasma health care is intended to
provide the interested reader with a summary of the current status of this
emerging field, its scope, and its broad interdisciplinary approach, ranging
from plasma physics, chemistry and technology, to microbiology, biochemistry,
biophysics, medicine and hygiene. Apart from the basic plasma processes
and the restrictions and requirements set by international health standards,
the review focuses on plasma interaction with prokaryotic cells (bacteria),
eukaryotic cells (mammalian cells), cell membranes, DNA etc. In so doing, some
of the unfamiliar terminology—an unavoidable by-product of interdisciplinary
research—is covered and explained. Plasma health care may provide a fast and
efficient new path for effective hospital (and other public buildings) hygiene—
helping to prevent and contain diseases that are continuously gaining ground
as resistance of pathogens to antibiotics grows. The delivery of medically
active ‘substances’ at the molecular or ionic level is another exciting topic
of research through effects on cell walls (permeabilization), cell excitation
(paracrine action) and the introduction of reactive species into cell cytoplasm.
Electric fields, charging of surfaces, current flows etc can also affect tissue in
a controlled way. The field is young and hopes are high. It is fitting to cover
the beginnings in New Journal of Physics, since it is the physics (and nonequilibrium
chemistry) of room temperature atmospheric pressure plasmas that
have made this development of plasma health care possible.
History
School
Mechanical, Electrical and Manufacturing Engineering
Citation
KONG, M.G....et al., 2009. Plasma medicine: an introductory review. New Journal of Physics, 11(115012), 35p.