The M.D. Anderson Cancer Center in Houston and the University of Pittsburgh both have the machine and are doing some additional testing. Mr. Kanzius was not from the medical field and somewhat stumbled up on his creation, being a person suffering from cancer as well. This is a recent story done by 60 Minutes.
Now adding nanno particles to the process is showing how to target and find the cancer cells. A Nobel Prize winner, skeptic and thinking nothing would result made the donations. The process is harmless using radio waves and "cooks" the cancer, some tests have started with animals. The nanno cells adhere to the cancel cells, not normal cells and this is what cooks the cancer cells with the radio wave technology. It is almost something out of
science fiction, but one more potential step forward in the cure for cancer. If this works, many drug companies might be on a whole new path for R and D. John Kanzius may not live long enough though to see it through, which is sad.
Watch the video and form your own opinion. The story was very well done and if the R and D can turn this in to a success, it could save the lives of millions. The film stated it was about 4 years away from the potential of being tried on a human. BD
What if we told you that a guy with no background in science or medicine - not even a college degree - has come up with what may be one of the most promising breakthroughs in cancer research in years? Well it's true, and if you think it sounds improbable, consider this: he did it with his wife's pie pans and hot dogs.
Here's how it works: one box sends radio waves over to the other, creating enough energy to activate gas in a fluorescent light. Kanzius put his hand in the field to demonstrate that radio waves are harmless to humans.