Abstract

Machines built at the molecular level (referred to as "nanomachines") may be utilized to treat the human body of its numerous diseases. Nanorobotics is the science of building machines or robots at or near the scale of a nanometre (10-9 meters). Nanomedicine is the term used to describe this application of nanotechnology to the field of medicine. Future-looking uses for nanotechnology include minuscule robots that can build other machines, navigate inside the body to distribute drugs, or do microsurgery. Chemists are discovering how to use protein dynamics to power micro and nano size machines using catalytic processes, drawing inspiration from the biological motors of live cells. The toolkit for nanorobots includes items like a cavity for storing medication, probes, blades, and chisels to remove plaque and obstructions, microwave emitters, and ultrasonic signal generators to destroy cancerous cells, two electrodes generating an electric current, heating the cell up until it dies, powerful lasers could burn away harmful material like arterial plaque. A cream incorporating nanorobots that remove the proper amount of dead skin, remove excess oils, add missing oils, apply the right amounts of natural moisturizing ingredients, and even accomplish the elusive objective of "deep pore cleaning" may be utilized to treat skin problems. Other uses include the treatment of gout, kidney stones, gouty arthritis, parasite elimination, cancer treatment, and arteriosclerosis treatment.

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