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Respirocytes "Artificial Mechanical Red Cell"
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This set of Nanomedicine terms are provided with permission from and courtesy of: Robert A. Freitas Jr.
And are from his technical book "Nanomedicine, Volume I", published in late 1999. (The entire text of which is online, including the entire Glossary). Words that he did NOT coin are marked with a double asterisk. Words he probably did not coin are marked with a single asterisk. Words that appeared for the first time in his book are unasterisked.
Nanite names:
Clottocytes "Artificial Mechanical Platelets" (artificial platelets)
Microbivores "Artificial Mechanical Phagocytes" (artificial white cells)
Summary article
*Aerobots (aerobotics) -- aerial (flying) robots.
Autogenous control -- in medical nanorobotics, the conscious control of in
vivo nanorobotic systems by the human user or patient; in biochemistry, the
action of a gene product that either inhibits (negative autogenous control)
or activates (positive autogenous control) expression of the gene coding for
it.
Baronatation -- in medical nanorobotics, locomotion through a frozen fluid
by applying mechanical pressure along the path travelled to induce melting
ahead, followed by regelation (refreezing) behind.
**Cell engineering -- deliberate artificial modifications to biological
cellular systems on a cell-by-cell basis.
**Cell surgery -- in medical nanorobotics, modifying cellular structures
using medical nanomachines.
Chemotactic nanosensor -- in medical nanorobotics, a nanosensor used to
determine the chemical characteristics of surfaces, possibly configured as a
pad coated with an array of reversible, perhaps reconfigurable, artificial
molecular receptors.
Chronocyte -- in medical nanorobotics, a theorized mobile, mass-storage
(nanorobotic) device, similar to a communicyte, that may be used as a mobile
source of precisely synchronized universal time inside the human body.
Communicyte -- in medical nanorobotics, a theorized mobile, mass-storage
(nanorobotic) device that can be used for information transport throughout
the human body.
Conjugation -- in medical nanorobotics, the docking of two or more
nanorobots for the purpose of exchanging information, energy or materials,
or to establish a larger multirobotic structure; in biology, the union of
two unicellular organisms accompanied by an interchange of nuclear material,
as in Paramecium.
Crystallescence -- in medical nanorobotics, the crystallization of solid
solute that is offloaded by nanorobot sorting rotors at a concentration that
exceeds the solvation capacity of the surrounding solvent.
Cytocarriage -- in medical nanorobotics, the commandeering of a natural
motile cell, by a medical nanorobot, for the purposes of in vivo transport
(of the nanorobot), or to perform a herding function (of the affected cell),
or for other purposes.
*Cytocide -- the killing of living cells.
*Cytography -- a physical description (and mapping) of the living cell.
Cytoidentification -- identification of cell type.
*Cytometrics -- the quantitative measurement of cell sizes, shapes,
structures, and numbers.
Cytonatation -- in medical nanorobotics, swimming around inside a living
cell.
Cytonavigation -- in medical nanorobotics, navigation inside the cell;
cellular navigation.
Cytopenetration -- in medical nanorobotics, entry into cells by penetrating
the plasma membrane.
Cytoskeletolysis -- in medical nanorobotics, purposeful destruction of the
cellular cytoskeleton by a nanorobot, for cytocidal purposes.
*Cytotomography -- tomographic imaging of an individual cell.
Cytovehicle -- in medical nanorobotics, a living cell that has been
commandeered by a medical nanorobot for use during cytocarriage.
Demarcation -- in medical nanorobotics, a crude form of functional
navigation in which artificial conditions detectable by in vivo medical
nanorobots are created at or near the target treatment site, such as warm or
cold spots, pressure spots, or injected chemical plumes.
Dermal Zippers -- see zippocytes.
**Diamondoid -- structures that resemble diamond in a broad sense; strong,
stiff structures containing dense, three-dimensional networks of covalent
bonds, formed chiefly from first and second row atoms with a valence of
three or more. Many of the most useful diamondoid structures will be rich
in tetrahedrally coordinated carbon.
Diamondophagy -- eating diamond.
**Disassembler -- in molecular nanotechnology, a nanomachine or system of
nanomachines able to take an object apart while at each step recording the
structure and composition of that object at the molecular level.
Disequilibration -- in medical nanorobotics, maintenance or inducement of a
state of perpetual ionic, chemical, or energetic disequilibrium in a living
cell by a medical nanorobot, usually for the purpose of inducing cytocide.
Effervescence -- in medical nanorobotics, bubble formation by a gaseous
solute that is offloaded by nanorobot sorting rotors at a concentration that
exceeds the solvation capacity of the surrounding solvent.
Engulf formation -- in medical nanorobotics, a configuration that may be
adopted by a metamorphic nanorobot, in which the nanorobot reshapes itself
to create an interior cavity capable of trapping a living cell, virion, or
other biological particle.
**Exploratory engineering -- design and analysis of systems that are
theoretically possible but cannot be built yet, owing to the limitations of
currently available tools.
Functional navigation -- in medical nanorobotics, a form of nanorobotic
navigation in which nanodevices seek to detect subtle variations in their
environment, comparing sensor readings with target tissue/cell profiles and
then congregating wherever a precisely defined set of preconditions exists.
Histonatation -- in medical nanorobotics, locomotion (swimming) through
tissues by a nanorobot.
Histonavigation -- in medical nanorobotics, navigation through tissues by a
nanorobot.
*Hypsithermal limit -- the maximum amount of energy that may be released at
Earth's surface, as a result of human technological activities, without
significantly altering the natural global energy balance; estimated as
10^13-10^15 watts.
In cyto -- within a biological cell.
Inmessaging -- in medical nanorobotics, conveyance of information from a
source external to the human body, or external to working nanodevices, to a
receiver located inside the human body.
In nucleo -- within the nucleus of a cell.
In sanguo -- within the bloodstream.
Macrosensing -- in medical nanorobotics, the detection of global somatic
states (inside the human body) and extrasomatic states (sensory data
originating outside of the human body) by in vivo nanorobots.
Massometer -- in medical nanorobotics, a nanosensor device for measuring the
mass of individual molecules or small physical objects to single-proton
resolution.
*Messenger molecule -- a chemically recognizable molecule which can convey
information after it is received and decoded by an appropriate chemical
sensor.
Metamorphic -- in medical nanorobotics, capable of adopting multiple
physical configurations via smooth changes from one configuration to
another.
Microbiotagraphics -- mapping the microbiotic populations present in the
human body.
**Molecular assembler -- a general-purpose device for molecular
manufacturing, able to guide chemical reactions by positioning individual
molecules to atomic accuracy (e.g. mechanosynthesis) and to construct a wide
range of useful and stable molecular structures according to precise
specifications.
**Molecular manufacturing -- manufacturing using molecular machinery, giving
molecule-by-molecule control of products via positional chemical synthesis,
to produce complex molecular structures manufactured to precise
specifications.
**Molecular medicine -- a variety of pharmaceutical techniques and gene
therapies that address specific molecular diseases or molecular defects in
biological systems.
**Molecular nanotechnology -- thorough, inexpensive control of the structure
of matter based on molecule-by-molecule control of products and byproducts;
the products and processes of molecular manufacturing, including molecular
machinery; a technology based on the ability to build structures to
complex, atomic specifications by mechanosynthesis or other means; most
broadly, the engineering of all complex mechanical systems constructed from
the molecular level.
**Molecular sorting rotor -- a class of nanomechanical device capable of
selectively binding (or releasing) molecules from (or to) solution, and of
transporting these bound molecules against significant concentration
gradients.
**Molecular surgery (molecular repair) -- in medical nanorobotics, the
analysis and physical correction of molecular structures in the body using
medical nanomachines.
Monkeywrenching -- in medical nanorobotics, the mechanical or chemical
jamming of cellular equilibrium processes, with a cytocidal objective. See
also disequilibration.
Nanapheresis -- in medical nanorobotics, the removal of bloodborne medical
nanorobots from the body using aphersis-like processes.
Nanocentrifuge -- in medical nanorobotics, a proposed nanodevice that can
spin materials at very high speed, imparting rotational accelerations of up
to one trillion gravities (g's), thus permitting rapid sortation.
Nanochronometer -- in medical nanorobotics, a proposed clock or timing
mechanism constructed of nanoscale components.
Nanocrit (Nct) -- in medical nanorobotics, volume-fraction or bloodstream
concentration of medical nanorobots, expressed as a percentage.
*Nanomedicine -- (1) the comprehensive monitoring, control, construction,
repair, defense, and improvement of all human biological systems, working
from the molecular level, using engineered nanodevices and nanostructures;
(2) the science and technology of diagnosing, treating, and preventing
disease and traumatic injury, of relieving pain, and of preserving and
improving human health, using molecular tools and molecular knowledge of the
human body; (3) the employment of molecular machine systems to address
medical problems, using molecular knowledge to maintain and improve human
health at the molecular scale.
*Nanorobot -- a computer-controlled robotic device constructed of
nanometer-scale components to molecular precision, usually microscopic in
size (often abbreviated as "nanobot").
*Nanosensor -- a chemical or physical sensor constructed using nanoscale
components, usually microscopic or submicroscopic in size.
Nanosieving -- in medical nanorobotics, a nanodevice that can sort molecules
or other nanoscale objects by physical sieving.
Naturophilia -- an exclusive love of Nature, disdaining everything that is
artificial or technological.
Navicyte -- in medical nanorobotics, a mobile, mass-storage (nanorobotic)
device, similar to a communicyte, that may be used to establish a
navigational network inside the human body.
Outmessaging -- in medical nanorobotics, conveyance of information from a
transmitter located inside the human body, especially from working
nanodevices, to the patient or to a recipient external to the human body.
Pharmacyte -- in medical nanorobotics, a theorized (nanorobotic) device
capable of delivering precise doses of biologically active chemicals to
individually-addressed human body tissue cells (e.g. cell-by-cell drug
delivery).
Positional navigation -- in medical nanorobotics, a form of nanorobotic
navigation in which nanodevices know their exact location inside the human
body to ~micron accuracy continuously at all times.
Presentation semaphore -- in medical nanorobotics, a mechanical device used
to display specific antigens, chemical ligands, or other molecular objects
to the external environment, with the purpose of selectively modifying the
chemical or other surface characteristics of a nanorobot exterior.
**Replicator -- any system that can build copies of itself when provided
with the appropriate raw materials and energy.
Respirocrit -- in medical nanorobotics, the volume-fraction or bloodstream
concentration of respirocyte nanorobots, expressed as a percentage. /2/
Respirocyte -- in medical nanorobotics, a theorized bloodborne spherical
1-micron (nanorobotic) device having a 1000-atm pressure vessel with active
pumping powered by endogenous serum glucose, that serves as a mechanical
artificial red blood cell. /2/
Sanguinatation -- in medical nanorobotics, locomotion (especially swimming
by a nanorobot) through the bloodstream.
Sapphirophagy -- eating sapphire (corundum).
Thermogenic limit -- in medical nanorobotics, the maximum amount of waste
heat that may safely be released by a population of in vivo medical
nanorobots that are operating within a given tissue volume.
*Transtegumental -- crossing or passing through the skin or covering of a
body.
Vasculocyte -- in medical nanorobotics, a theorized (nanorobotic) device
capable of performing repairs of an injured vascular luminal surface. /1/
Vasculoid: is a single, complex, multisegmented nanotechnological medical robotic system capable of duplicating all essential thermal and biochemical transport functions of the blood, including circulation of respiratory gases, glucose, hormones, cytokines, waste products, and cellular components. See Vasculoid: A Personal Nanomedical Appliance to Replace Human Blood Robert A. Freitas Jr. & Christopher J. Phoenix. April 2002
Vasculography -- a physical description (and mapping) of the human vascular
system.
*Vitamins (engineering) -- in machine replication theory, vitamin parts are
components of a self-replicating machine which the machine is incapable of
producing itself, therefore these vital parts must be supplied from an
external source. /3/
Volitional normative model of disease -- in medical nanorobotics, disease is
said to be present in a human being upon either (1) the failure of optimal
physical (e.g. biological) functioning, or (2) the failure of desired (by
the patient) functioning.
Zippocytes -- in medical nanorobotics, a theorized medical nanorobot that
can rapidly perform incision-wound repairs to the dermis and epidermis;
dermal zippers.
Other Future Sciences, Nanotech and Nanoscience glossary sites
Foresight
IoN
Zyvex
Nanotechnology Part One: Taxonomy Codesta
Nanomedicine Book Glossary R A Freitas Jr.
JPK Instruments NanoBiotechnology Glossary (click NanoResources/Glossary)
Nanoword Steve Lenhert
Lextropicon: Extropian Neologisms Max More
Transhuman Terminology Anders Sandberg
Accelerating Future Lexicon Michael Anissimov
Terminology From The Omega Point Theory List
Orion's Arm Glossary M.Alan Kazlev, et al
Russian Society of Scanning Probe Microscopy and Nanotechnology.
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