Short Article - (2024) Volume 2, Issue 2
Immune Cell Therapy and Nuclear Medicine for Cancer
Received Date: Jun 01, 2024 / Accepted Date: Jul 08, 2024 / Published Date: Aug 01, 2024
Copyright: ©©2024 Kunal Joon. This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are credited.
Citation: Joon, K. (2024). Immune Cell Therapy and Nuclear Medicine for Cancer. J Res Edu, 2(2), 01.
Abstract
In immune cell therapy antibodies are given against autoimmune body or cancer cells in the nuclear medicine antibody can be cultured genetically by making them secret inhibitory peptide against cancer cells to cure them
Keywords
Antibodies, DNA Forward Rolling, Genetic Engineering
Figure 1: Study in Mice
In recent studies it shown in the mice the certain antibodies given to mice which are genetically modified can be given to secret the BAM protein which inhibit the growth of cancerous cell. Nuclear medicine Nuclear medicine design Energy doses. It is used to maintain energy balance in patients’ bodies and level the patient’s energy [1-7].
Antibodies
This is used to treat virus and kill it
It is used to kill the virus.
Designing monoclonal antibodies
Antibodies are designed by
DNA forward rolling and DNA backward rolling.
IN this we take a gene from cancerous cell design antibody against it to supress them
Discussion
We discussed about the role of immune cell therapy and nuclear medicine relation to the cure of any type of cancer
Conclusion
Nuclear medicine can be used to cure any type of cancer at any stage
References
- Manipulating an Immune Cell May Make Radiation TherapyMore Effective, Study Suggests.
- Treatment Research
- Cancer Currents: An NCI Cancer Research Blog
- Cancer research transforms and saves lives
- Leading Change in Cancer Clinical Research, Because Our Patients Can’t Wait
- Manipulating an Immune Cell May Make Radiation TherapyMore Effective, Study Suggests
- Virtual Mind–Body Fitness Classes Show Unexpected Benefit in People with Cancer

