You are here : Home > News > Carbon nanotubes: distribution within the body

Scientific result | Toxicology | Methodologies for life sciences

Carbon nanotubes: distribution within the body


​The rapid industrial success of carbon nanotubes raises questions about their impact on health and the environment. Researchers from the CEA and CNRS have developed a method to monitor these particles in the body, followed by observing their distribution after lung contamination. This study was published in ACS Nano.

Published on 3 July 2014

​Thanks to their remarkable mechanical and electronic properties, carbon nanotubes have quickly shed their status as a laboratory curiosity, finding applications in areas ranging from structural materials to electronic components. This justifies the current studies on their impacts on health and the environment.

 


 

How are these particles distributed in the body after pulmonary exposure? To find out, researchers from the CEA (IBITECS and IRAMIS) had to develop a new method to label them. During synthesis of the nanotubes (which are fully comparable to industrial ones), some of their atoms were replaced by 14C atoms, the radioactive isotope of carbon. Consequently, it became possible to track them in the body by conventional radioimaging, as well as by electron microscopy1 following tissue extraction. By utilizing a very good radiolabeling, this ultrasensitive method can detect amounts as low as approximately twenty nanotubes in an organ section.

Rodent models received a sole lung exposure of 20 micrograms of the labeled nanotubes. This procedure aimed to reproduce an accidental inhalation, the most likely type of contamination for humans, in particular during synthesis of nanotubes or the manufacture of objects containing them. The rodents were then examined at regular intervals for one year. This study demonstrates that a small fraction (0.7%) of nanotubes are able to cross the pulmonary barrier (i.e. the air/blood barrier), which are then steered especially to the liver, spleen and bone marrow. The continued increase in the amount of nanotubes found in these organs reflects an absence of elimination, at least during the twelve months that follow. Although these results are not directly transposable to humans, they do emphasize the importance of ultrasensitive detection methods for assessing the behavior of nanoparticles in the animal body.


[1] at the CNRS Laboratory of Photonics and Nanostructures (Marcoussis)

Top page