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English
CRC Press
15 July 2021
"The field of nanomedicine has risen quickly due to the increasing number of designer-made nanomaterials. These nanomaterials have the potential to manage diseases and change the way medicine is currently studied. However, the increased practice of using nanomaterials has shed light on how many concepts of nanomedicine and nanotoxicity have been overlooked. Nanotoxicology: Toxicity Evaluation of Nanomedicine Applications addresses the existing gaps between nanomedicine and nanotoxicity. This book also brings together up-to-date knowledge on advances toward safe-by-design nanomaterials and existing toxicity challenges.

This book delivers a comprehensive coverage in the field with fundamental understanding, serving as a platform to convey essential concepts of nanotoxicology and how these concepts can be employed to develop advanced nanomaterials for a range of biomedical applications. This book is an effort to answer some of the thoughtful nanotoxicological complications and their auspicious probable solutions with new approaches and careful toxicity assessment.

Key Features:

Reveals novel nanoscale approaches, toxicity assessment, and biomedical applications

Includes importance of nanotoxicity concepts in developing smart nanomaterials

Highlights unique contributions and ""A to Z"" aspects on the state-of-the-art from global leaders

Offers a complete package to learn fundamentals with recommendations on nanomaterials toxicity and safe-by-design nanomedicines

Nanotoxicology: Toxicity Evaluation of Nanomedicine Applications illuminates the high potential of many innovative nanomaterials, ultimately demonstrating them to be promising substitutes for available therapies that can be effectively used in fighting a myriad of biomedical complications. Further, this book reports legal, ethical, safety, and regulatory issues associated with nanomaterials, which have often been neglected, if not overlooked in literature and limiting clinical translation at nanoscale level. It will equip readers with cutting-edge knowledge of promising developments in nanomedicine and nanotoxicology, along with potential future prospects."

Edited by:   , , , ,
Imprint:   CRC Press
Country of Publication:   United Kingdom
Dimensions:   Height: 229mm,  Width: 152mm, 
Weight:   775g
ISBN:   9780367266479
ISBN 10:   0367266474
Pages:   474
Publication Date:  
Audience:   Professional and scholarly ,  Undergraduate
Format:   Hardback
Publisher's Status:   Active
Chapter 1 Nanomaterials: Types of Nanomaterials and Their Fundamental Physicochemical Properties....................................... 1 A. Shubha, S. R. Manohara, and S. S. Subhranshu Chapter 2 Innovations in Nanotechnology for Biomedical Sensing, Imaging, Drug Delivery, and Therapy........................................... 21 Anine Crous and Heidi Abrahamse Chapter 3 Nanomaterials for Drug Delivery.................................................. 43 Shailja Jain, Srividya Gorantla, and Gautam Singhvi Chapter 4 PLGA-Based Nanoparticulate Systems: New Trends in Nanomedicine................................................................................ 73 Devendra Jain, Abhijeet Singh, Bjorn John Stephen, Suman Sanadhya, Hemant Kumar Daima, Harishkumar Madhyastha, and Radha Madhyastha Chapter 5 Employing New Targeted Nanoencapsulation for Alzheimer’s Disease Treatment: A Change for the Better?........... 97 Arti Devi and Zaved Ahmed Khan Chapter 6 Nanomaterials-Assisted Elicitation of Pharmaceutically Important Secondary Metabolites from In Vitro Plant Cell Cultures...........................................................117 Sekhar Tiwari, Sachin Kumar Verma, Abhishek Bhargava, Anusha Ebenezer Alpheus, Rasanpreet Kaur, Rajesh Sharma, and Neeraj Khare Chapter 7 Impact of Nanomaterials on Health and Environment................ 133 Faisal Ali, Kanwal Akhtar, Ahmed Nawaz, M. Munir Sajid, Naveed Akhtar Shad, Muhammad Abdul Qayyum, and Yasir Javed Chapter 8 Consequences of Nanomaterials on Human Health and Ecosystem.................................................................. 157 Priyanka Kumari, Richa Seth, and Abha Meena Chapter 9 Conceptual Understanding of the Mechanisms of Nanotoxicity and Safety of Nanomedicines................................. 201 Rotimi Damilare, Maimako Rotdelmwa, Ashonibare Victory, Ogunnupebi Temitope, and Adeyemi Oluyomi Stephen Chapter 10 Insights into the Mechanisms of Nanotoxicity and Evaluation of Nanomaterials........................................................ 225 Vinod Kumar Yata Chapter 11 Sensors to Monitor and Evaluate the Toxicity of Nanomedicine Applications......................................................... 245 Bambang Kuswandi Chapter 12 Systems Approaches for Toxicological Assessment of Nanomaterials...................................................... 277 Hasmik Yepiskoposyan, Marja Talikka, Vincenzo Belcastro, Nikolai V. Ivanov, Diego Marescotti, Manuel C. Peitsch, and Julia Hoeng Chapter 13 Measurement of Oxygen Consumption Rate Based on Fluorescence Intensity and Lifetime as a Strategy to Assess Nanotoxicity................................................................................. 303 T. Sushma, Hemant Kumar Daima, D. R. Ramesh Babu, S. Amutha, and Sangly P. Srinivas Chapter 14 Current Knowledge on Toxicity of Nanomaterials: Toxicity Assessment and Impact.................................................. 339 Bhaskar Das, Mayuri Chabukdhara, Sanjukta Patra, and Manashjit Gogoi Chapter 15 The Role of Nanotechnology in the Management of Water Toxicity.............................................................................. 377 Vinod Kumar Yata Chapter 16 Challenges in the Assessment of Nanotoxicity, Recommendations, and Safe-by-Design Nanomedicines to Counter Toxicological Problems.................................................. 393 G. V. S. Subbaroy Sarma, Manoj Kumar Enamala, Maria P. Nikolova, Murthy Chavali, and Sudhakar Reddy Pamanji Chapter 17 Current Guidelines and Regulatory Challenges, Insight into the Legal, Societal, and Ethical Issues of Nanomaterials............ 445 Harjeet Nath, S. S. Subhranshu, and S. R. Manohara

Hemant Kumar Daima is A/Professor at Amity University Rajasthan, India and honorary ‘Visiting Research Fellow’ at RMIT University, Melbourne, Australia. Prior to Amity University, he has worked as A/Professor of Nanomedicine at Siddaganga Institute of Technology, India; Research Associate/Tutor at RMIT University, Australia and Research Fellow at University of Rajasthan, India. Dr. Daima obtained his MSc (Biotechnology) from University of Rajasthan, India; PhD (Applied Biology and Nanobiotechnology) from RMIT University, Australia. Dr. Daima is founder of Nano-Bio Interfacial Research Laboratory (NBIRL), and in-charge of newly established Amity University Science and Instrumentation Center-II (AUSIC-II). S. L. Kothari, FBS, FISPM, FNASc, FNAAS is Distinguished Professor of Biotechnology and Vice-President of Amity Science Technology and Innovation Foundation (ASTIF) at Amity University Rajasthan, Jaipur, India. Professor S.L. Kothari graduated from University of Rajasthan, Jaipur, India in 1984 with PhD, and during his long career he held post-doctoral positions as Fulbright Fellow at the University of Illinois, Urbana-Champaign, USA (1983-84); University of Nottingham, UK as Commonwealth Academic Staff Fellow and Rockefeller Foundation Biotechnology Career Fellow (1989-1996); University of Tsukuba, Japan as Visiting Foreign Research Fellow (2003-04). He held academic positions as Professor, Head of Department and Dean Faculty of Science at the University of Rajasthan, Jaipur; and later as Director, Institute of Biotechnology and Pro Vice Chancellor of Amity University Rajasthan, Jaipur. His efforts resulted in to the establishment of Converging Technologies Centre (nano-bio-info-cogno) at the University of Rajasthan, Jaipur that imparts BTech-MTech dual degree in four different streams of Converging Technologies. Suresh Bhargava is Distinguished Professor, Associate Pro Vice-Chancellor (India) and the Founding Director of the Centre for Advanced Materials & Industrial Chemistry at RMIT University, Melbourne, Australia. He obtained his PhD from the University of Exeter, UK and was conferred a DSc (Honoris Causa) by University of Rajasthan, Jaipur, India. Professor Bhargava is a world-renowned interdisciplinary scientist and is recognized for delivering research excellence that underpins significant industrial applications. He published more than 439 journal articles and more than 200 industrial reports.

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