Bio-Excretion of Smaller Quantum Dots

An article in the December 2007 edition of Biophotonics International Magazine summarizes  a recent study published in Nature Biotechnology by researchers at MIT and Boston's Beth Israel Deaconess Medical Center that determined quantum dots must be less than 5.5 nm in order to be rapidly excreted from the body. According to the article, this finding was unexpected because "the threshold for renal filtration and urinary excretion of globular proteins is estimated between 6.2 and 7.1 nm." The quantum dots tested by the researchers had CdSe cores and ZnS shells, and were tested in mice after receiving neutral charges. Interestingly, the study found that quantum dots 5.5 nm and below in diameter had an approximate four-hour half life in the body. The scientists also maintain "the ability of nanoparticles to pass the kidney filters is a function of their shape, size and surface charge."
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American Bar Association Journal Links to Nanotechnology Law Report

The Journal of the American Bar Association ("ABA") recently added a link to nanolawreport to its comprehensive directory of legal blogs (aka/ "blawgs"). The link can be found under the directory's "Science & Technology Law" section. Nanolawreport is the first nanotechnology legal blog linked by the ABA Journal and according to a recent article by lexBlog, it is the only one published by a top 200 U.S. law firm. Many thanks to our readers for their continued support.
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Upcoming: Town Hall Meetings

Mark your calendars for an upcoming town hall meeting on nanotechnology and related issues.  Northwestern University will host a follow-up meeting to the first one held in mid-December.  More information on the next meeting, and results of the first, after the jump. Continue Reading...

ASU To Offer Nanotechnology Law Class

Back in October, we reported on a $314,000 grant three Arizona State University professors received from DOE to study nanotechnology regulation.  It seems that grant has already begun to bear fruit, as Nanowerk reports one of the grant recipients - law professor Doug Sylvester - will be teaching a two-hour interdisciplinary class in the Spring entitled "Nanotechnology And The Law."  Professor Sylvester describes the import of his class:

“It’s not just about the law, it’s about our lives,” says Sylvester, a College of Law professor and faculty fellow in the College’s Center for the Study of Law, Science, & Technology. “For the first time in history, we know something is coming that carries great potential and possible grave danger. The technology will revolutionize much of how we live in the world. The question becomes, how, as a society, can we prepare ourselves to best promote the benefits and prevent the risks?”

Professor Sylvester's course will be geared toward public policy, bioengineering, medicine, law and other students, and, according to the Nanowerk article, the class is designed to encourage students to collaborate to find ways of using public policy and regulation to balance the potential threat nanotechnology may pose to the environment against the need to develop the technology. 

I look forward to seeing what research comes out of this grant and out of this course.

Knight Rider Goes Nano

One sign of nanotechnology's ascendance in the public's consciousness is the increasing reference to nanotechnology in mainstream television programming.  One recent example is the re-imagination of the 1980s TV program "Knight Rider."   

Recently, Popular Mechanics published an article comparing the new Knight Rider's "KITT" (the talking car), a modified 2008 Ford Mustang Shelby, with the 1980s Trans Am "KITT."  Aside from focusing on the real-life differences between a 1982 Trans Am and a 2008 Mustang, Popular Mechanics mentioned some of the fictional "features" of the new talking car:

Last week, NBC unveiled an all-new, controversial KITT, which is set to star in the made-for-TV Knight Rider movie in February. Based on the still-to-be-released Ford Mustang Shelby GT500KR (click here for engine-revving video), this virtual Stang comes tricked out with a supercomputer that can hack almost any system; a very capable weapons system; and a body—thanks to nanotechnology—that's able to shape-shift and change color at will. Like its predecessor, the 21st century KITT gets AI from digital effects wizards that makes it an ideal crime-fighting partner: logical, precise and infinitely smart.

While clearly science fiction, scientists in the real world are developing methods of leveraging nanotechnology to develop "cloaks" that refract light around objects to, in effect, allow those looking at the object to see around it.

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New Genotoxicity Study on SWCNTs.

Eight scientists from NIOSH and two from Lockheed Martin recently published "Single-walled Carbon Nanotubes: Geno- and Cytotoxic Effects in Lung Fibroblast V79 Cells," in the Journal of Toxicology and Environmental Health, Part A, 70:2071-2079 (Dec. 15, 2007).  The authors claim the study is the first published research examining the potential genotoxic effects of cellular exposure to SWCNTs. The paper is summarized below.
 

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Blue Christmas

Elemental silver is well-known for its anti-microbial and other alleged health benefits.  Several companies sell silver to consumers for ingestion to allegedly fight all types of health problems ranging from allergies, to acne, and even cancer (purportedly).  The practice, of course, is not approved by the FDA so manufacturers cannot make explicit claims regarding the purported health benefit of these products.  Product labels must also explain the products do not have FDA approval. 

Unfortunately, as one man who is highlighted on FoxNews.com recently learned the hard way, eat or drink enough elemental silver (a whole lot) and you might turn blue . . . or gray . . . permanently.  Many claim argyria -- the name for this unusual condition -- is a nothing more than a myth or a fable.  However, it is well-documented in scientific literature.  Thankfully, although permanent, it is not otherwise considered "harmful" to one's health.

Interesting (with a small "i") you say . . .  but how does this possibly relate to nanotechnology??? 

Several neutracutical products claim to use nanosilver particles as the newest and best way to deliver elemental silver to the body.  One claimed benefit is that because it uses nanoscale particles, the liquid appears clear (instead of brown).  You can find some of these products on Woodrow Wilson International Center for Scholar's Project on Emerging Nanotechnologies consumer product inventory.

Personally, I would never drink the stuff, but if enough people do, there may be new cases of argyria accompanied by inevitable plaintiffs lawsuits.  It would be unfortunate if more "traditional" uses of nanosilver are somehow tarnished in the process.  If you watch the video clip on Fox, the poor guy still swears by the stuff (and "yes," he is filmed drinking a clear version).

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Consumer Product Safety Commission Gets Closer to Increased Funding

"The Consumer Product Safety Modernization Act" (HR 4040) passed the House yesterday and was forwarded to the Senate. The bill was largely prompted by Chinese toy recalls this past fall. In addition to toughening safety standards for toys, the bill increases funding for CPSC to $100 million by FY2001 ad provides an additional $20 million to upgrade CPSC's product liability testing laboratory.  A Senate committee approved its own CPSC bill in October  -- "The CPSC Reform Act of 2007" -- but it has not reached a floor vote yet.  The Senate version would more than double the CSPC's budget from $62.7 million to $141.7 million by 2015. 

Representatives of CPSC have previously indicated that current under-staffing and underfunding may hinder its future ability to conduct post-marketing evaluations of potentially problematic consumer products containing nanoscale materials.  At the same time, CPSC maintains the existing laws and regulations at its disposal are sufficient to manage any potential nano-related EHS risks posed by consumer products employing nanoscale materials.  Let's hope any increased funding for CPSC slowly but surely makes it way down to nanotechnology issues in 2008 and beyond.

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American Tort Reform Association Identifies "Worst" Jurisdictions

The American Tort Reform Association (ATR) has named its list of "Judicial Hellholes" for 2007.  These are jurisdictions in which ATR believes "the scales of justice are wildly out of balance."  ATR's "worst offenders" are: South Florida; Rio Grande Valley and Gulf Coast, Texas; Cook County, Illinois; West Virginia; Clark County, Nevada; and Atlantic County, New Jersey.  Additionally, ATR's "watch list" includes: Madison County, Illinois; St. Clair County, Illinois; Northern New Mexico; Delaware; and California.  You can see the complete report at  http://www.atra.org/reports/hellholes/. 
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Russian Official Warns Public About False Advertising for "Nanoproducts"

According to Tass, First Vice-Premier Sergei Ivanov spoke at the first year summary meeting of the Russian government's Nanotechnologies Council early today. The BBC reported Ivanov warned the Russian public against false advertising for nano-enabled products, indicating licensing standards for the sale of nanotechnology products in Russia have not yet been developed. Regarding existing "nanoproducts," Ivanov said:

I would simply like to warn citizens against jumping at this bait. They are being conned. . . . These products have absolutely not been licensed in any way, and I strongly doubt that they have to do anything whatsoever with nanotechnology.

Aside from licensing issues, Ivanov's concerns echo last year's Magic Nano debacle in Germany.

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New Survey Shows Increase in 2006 Newspaper/Wire Coverage of Alleged Nano-EHS-Risks

Sharon Friedman -- Professor and Director of the Science and Environmental Writing Program in the Department of Journalism and Communication at Lehigh University -- has been gathering data regarding newspaper and wire coverage of nanotechnology for the past seven years.  She presented her 2006 research data at the Project for Emerging Nanotechnologies at the Woodrow Wilson International Center for Scholars earlier this afternoon.  Her data covers the 20 largest newspapers in the US,  the 10 largest in the UK, plus the Associated Press and United Press International wires. 

Professor Friedman found a large increase (50%) in the total number of newspaper articles dealing with nanotechnology in general in the US 2006.  Her survey, however, indicates only a smaller increase in the number of articles touching upon alleged EHS and/or societal risks of nanomaterials.  Specifically, Professor Friedman found 57 articles mentioning alleged EHS and/or societal risks published in the US in 2006, representing an additional 21 additional article-increase over 2005.  In the UK she found 16 articles mentioning these topics, representing a 4 article-increase. 

Interestingly, Professor Friedman's study found only 163 articles in the US and 78 in the UK were published at least mentioning alleged EHS and/or societal risks in the during the seven years of 1999 through 2006.  Detailed slides from Professor Friedman's presentation can be found here.

 

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Survey Regarding Nano-Related EHS Practices by New England Companies

The Project on Emerging Nanotechnologies at the Woodrow Wilson International Center for Scholars recently published "A Survey of Environmental, Health and Safety Risk Management Information Needs and practices Among Nanotechnology Firms in the Massachusetts Region." The survey was undertaken by two industrial hygienists at the University of Massachusetts at Lowell, and was conducted in two steps:

(i) 43 companies completed an on-line nano-EHS-risk questionnaire; and

(ii) 12 gave further in-depth nano-EHS-risk interviews. 

The surveyed companies were all located in Massachusetts and "adjoining areas" of New England.

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NIOSH Bulletin Says "No Substantial" Nano-EHS-Risk Link

As noted by Michael Heintz earlier today, the National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH) just published a Current Intelligence Bulletin, entitled "Interim Guidance for the Medical Screening of Workers Potentially Exposed to Engineered Nanoparticles."   Although the interim document is not binding on NIOSH or the general public, it is still interesting to consider from a potential liability perspective. 

We have previously presented on the issue of a nanomanufacturer's duty  to warn (or lack thereof)regarding potential adverse health effects allegedly associated with exposure to certain nanoscale materials in light of the current uncertainty of scientific studies.  One of the most interesting conclusions of the NIOSH bulletin is that,

"No substantial link has been established between occupational exposure to engineered nanoparticles and adverse health effects."

In short, although NIOSH recommends: (i) prudent measures to control potential worker exposure; (ii)  hazard surveillance activities; and (iii) and established medical surveillance techniques to identify any potential nano-exposure issues, the bottom line is NIOSH believes ". . . insufficient medical evidence exists at this time to recommend the specific medical screening of workers potentially exposed to engineered nanoparticles."

Even though the "substantial link" language used by NIOSH may appear "helpful" from a manufacturer's perspective, companies still need to be aware in some states potential liability attaches when there is only a “possible/potential” scientific association between exposure and injury. See., e.g., Garfinkle v. Bayer Corp., 779 N.Y.S.2d 71 (S.Ct. NY 2004).  Other states have gone so far as to attach liability where there was only slight evidence even "tending to show” such an association. See, e.g., Miller v. Pfizer, Inc.,  2000 WL 968792 (D. KS. 2000).  

Finally, it is interesting to note NIOSH acknowledges a potential "litigation bias" might arise from simply creating a workplace exposure registry for nanoscale materials. The Idea that attention from NIOSH may spawn a new wave of litigation is not far-fetched.  As an example, plaintiffs’ attorneys relied heavily on NIOSH findings when bringing so-called “popcorn lung” cases over the past few years. These cases, which allege that occupational exposure to diacetyl (a popcorn butter ingredient) causes lung disease, were mostly filed after NIOSH investigated health complaints relating to popcorn workers in Missouri. Many argue the early government attention was followed directly by civil litigation.

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NIOSH Guidance on Workplace Exposure

The National Institute of Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH) has just today released in "Interim Guidance for the Medical Screening of Workers Potentially Exposed to Engineered Nanoparticles."  Before now, NIOSH was keeping mostly quiet on the issue of nanoparticles, and this report gives some insight into the agency's consideration of the issues. Continue Reading...

Another MSDS Example for Multiwalled Carbon Nanotubes

For our readers who are interested, we are posting another MSDS from a producer of multiwalled carbon nanotubes.  We previously discussed the issue of what information nanomanufacturers are putting in their Material Safety Data Sheets here.

Plus, here is an added bonus MSDS from Cheaptubes where you can order various nanoparticles over the internet at discount prices.

Nanotechnology Law Report November 2007

Nanotechnology Law Report November 2007
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New Nano Public Opinion Poll Published in Nature Nanotechnology

Dr. Paul Scheufle is Professor of Life Sciences Communication and Journalism & Mass Communication at the University of Wisconsin, Madison.  Frequent visitors of nanolawreport have undoubtedly seen our link to his website -- www.nanopublic.com.

Back in April 2006, Dr. Scheufle' published the results of his survey of major newspapers which searched for all articles concerning nanotechnology published from January 2004 through April 2006. 

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Review: Lloyd's New Nano Insurance Report

Earlier this week Lloyd's Emerging Risks Team published a 26-page report entitled "Nanotechnology: Recent Developments, Risks and Opportunities."  At the outset, Lloyd's notes its "report aims to provide an up-to-date view to inform the . . . insurance industry about the risks and opportunities that may exist in this developing area," and is intended to "enable insurers to make better informed decisions regarding any nanotechnology risks they may have written or intend to write."  A short review follows.

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More on Nanohorn Toxicity

Back in August 2007, we ran a short article on an in vivo study published in Nanotoxicology regarding the potential toxicity of carbon-based nanohorns on mice which was conducted by researchers at the Oak Ridge National Laboratory and the University of Tennessee.  The scientists concluded the "combined results [of the experiments] suggest that SWCNH is a relatively innocuous nanomaterial when delivery to mice in vivo using aspiration as a delivery mechanism.”  In a recent article in the monthly trade newsletter "Nanoparticle News," one of the original researchers theorized that the largely benign results might be attributable to a lack of metal contaminants in the nanohorns because they are manufactured "through simple ablation of a pure carbon target without the use of transitional metal catalysts."  Metal catalyst contaminants are thought to cause the inflammatory responses and oxidative stress found in prior toxicology studies of single-walled carbon nanotubes. 
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Fragrance-laden Halloysite Nanotubes

The December 11, 2007 edition of Market Wire is reporting NaturalNano has just received independent validation from a top undisclosed consumer product manufacturer for its extended release fragrance-loaded holloysite nanotubes.  NaturalNano exclusively licenses the technology from the Naval Research Laboratory, which allows hollow halloysite nanotubes to be filled with substances such as fragrances or antimicrobials for extended release over time.  Halloysite nanotubes are found naturally occurring in certain earth clays, and NaturalNano claims it is cheaper to mine/harvest halloysite tubes than it is to manufacture carbon nanotubes through traditional processes.  NaturalNano believes its new application has the potential to transform cosmetics, moisturizing creams, deodorants, laundry products, carpet and furniture cleaners, and automotive and cloth fabrics.
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That's a Big Number

Here's a little math for your Monday morning.  Late last week it was reported that total nanotechnology investment is expected to be worth $1 trillion by 2015.  Yes, that's "trillion."  With a "T." Continue Reading...

The Economist on Nano Safety

The November 22, 2007 issue of The Economist contains a story on nanotechnology safety entitled "A little risky business."   The article focuses on Andrew Maynard's presentation before the House Science Commitee in October, an event we covered here, and also covers the ongoing debate over the use of silver nanoparticles as an antimicrobial agent in consumer products. 

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Review: "Size Matters: Regulating Nanotechnology," Harvard Environmental Law Review

Professor Albert C. Lin at the University of California at Davis law school, recently published "Size Matters: Regulating Nanotechnology" in the Harvard Environmental Law Review. 31 Harv. Envtl. L. Rev. 349 (2007).

Lin begins with broad overviews of (i) the potential benefits of nanotechnology, (ii) the theoretical environmental, health, and safety (“EHS”) concerns accompanying the use of some nanoscale materials in certain settings, and (iii) how he believes existing federal laws are insufficient to address this latter risk. Most of this has been said before in a myriad of very articulate papers published by the Woodrow Wilson International Center for Scholars (“WWI”). Although Lin gives WWI plenty of credit, his summaries are not as well-balanced as one might hope. At the very least, Lin should have addressed the set of American Bar Association papers which provide an excellent counterpoint. Lin also spends a fair amount of time (i) recounting lessons he believes industry should have learned from the dispute over genetically modified organisms, (ii) debating whether the “precautionary principle” should be adopted by EPA, and (iii) providing regulators a host of reasons why they should specifically regulate nanotechnology sooner rather than later. While interesting, these topics distract from the core of his paper.

 

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