Silicon Micro‐ and Nanofabrication for Medicine

Daniel H. Fine(Houston Methodist), Alessandro Grattoni(Houston Methodist), Randy Goodall(NanoMedical Systems (United States)), Shyam S. Bansal(Houston Methodist), Ciro Chiappini(Imperial College London), Sharath Hosali(NanoMedical Systems (United States)), Anne L. van de Ven(Houston Methodist), S. Srinivasan(Houston Methodist), Xuewu Liu(Houston Methodist), Biana Godin(Houston Methodist), Louis Brousseau(Houston Methodist), Iman K. Yazdi(Houston Methodist), Joseph Fernandez‐Moure(Houston Methodist), Ennio Tasciotti(Houston Methodist), Hung‐Jen Wu(Houston Methodist), Ye Hu(Houston Methodist), Steve Klemm, Mauro Ferrari(Houston Methodist)
Advanced Healthcare Materials
April 15, 2013
Cited by 80Open Access
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Abstract

This manuscript constitutes a review of several innovative biomedical technologies fabricated using the precision and accuracy of silicon micro- and nanofabrication. The technologies to be reviewed are subcutaneous nanochannel drug delivery implants for the continuous tunable zero-order release of therapeutics, multi-stage logic embedded vectors for the targeted systemic distribution of both therapeutic and imaging contrast agents, silicon and porous silicon nanowires for investigating cellular interactions and processes as well as for molecular and drug delivery applications, porous silicon (pSi) as inclusions into biocomposites for tissue engineering, especially as it applies to bone repair and regrowth, and porous silica chips for proteomic profiling. In the case of the biocomposites, the specifically designed pSi inclusions not only add to the structural robustness, but can also promote tissue and bone regrowth, fight infection, and reduce pain by releasing stimulating factors and other therapeutic agents stored within their porous network. The common material thread throughout all of these constructs, silicon and its associated dielectrics (silicon dioxide, silicon nitride, etc.), can be precisely and accurately machined using the same scalable micro- and nanofabrication protocols that are ubiquitous within the semiconductor industry. These techniques lend themselves to the high throughput production of exquisitely defined and monodispersed nanoscale features that should eliminate architectural randomness as a source of experimental variation thereby potentially leading to more rapid clinical translation.


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