
Sign up to save your podcasts
Or


Imagine a nanoparticle, less that a thousandth of the width of a human hair, that is so precise that it can carry a medicine to just where it’s needed in the body, improving the drug’s impact and reducing side effects.
Ijeoma Uchegbu, Professor of Pharmaceutical Nanoscience at University College London, has spent her career with this goal in mind. She creates nanoparticles to carry medicines to regions of the body that are notoriously hard to reach, such as the back of the eye and the brain. With clinical trials in the pipeline, she hopes to treat blindness with eyedrops, transform pain relief and tackle the opioid crisis.
Ijeoma took an unconventional route into science. Growing up in the UK and in Nigeria, she tells Professor Jim Al-Khalili her remarkable life story, from being fostered by a white family in rural Kent, while her Nigerian parents finished their studies, to struggling to pay the bills through her PhD as a single mum with young children.
So passionate is Ijeoma to spread her love of science, she’s even turned to stand-up comedy to help get her message across!
By BBC World Service4.4
940940 ratings
Imagine a nanoparticle, less that a thousandth of the width of a human hair, that is so precise that it can carry a medicine to just where it’s needed in the body, improving the drug’s impact and reducing side effects.
Ijeoma Uchegbu, Professor of Pharmaceutical Nanoscience at University College London, has spent her career with this goal in mind. She creates nanoparticles to carry medicines to regions of the body that are notoriously hard to reach, such as the back of the eye and the brain. With clinical trials in the pipeline, she hopes to treat blindness with eyedrops, transform pain relief and tackle the opioid crisis.
Ijeoma took an unconventional route into science. Growing up in the UK and in Nigeria, she tells Professor Jim Al-Khalili her remarkable life story, from being fostered by a white family in rural Kent, while her Nigerian parents finished their studies, to struggling to pay the bills through her PhD as a single mum with young children.
So passionate is Ijeoma to spread her love of science, she’s even turned to stand-up comedy to help get her message across!

7,875 Listeners

854 Listeners

1,073 Listeners

5,571 Listeners

1,807 Listeners

1,769 Listeners

1,054 Listeners

2,005 Listeners

605 Listeners

753 Listeners

93 Listeners

408 Listeners

429 Listeners

823 Listeners

765 Listeners

745 Listeners

228 Listeners

362 Listeners

475 Listeners

242 Listeners

3,221 Listeners

781 Listeners

115 Listeners

1,020 Listeners