Eleanor Stride


Eleanor Stride is a Professor of Biomedical Engineering at St Catherine's College, Oxford. Stride engineers drug delivery systems using carefully designed microbubbles and studies how they can be used in diagnostics.

Education

Stride completed her Bachelor's degree in Mechanical Engineering and a PhD in the Ultrasonics group at University College London. She had planned to work for Aston Martin. Whilst there became interested in using ultrasound for imaging microbubbles, and was awarded a Royal Society Brian Mercer Innovation Feasibility Award.

Research and career

Stride was awarded a Royal Academy of Engineering lectureship at University College London, where she explored ultrasound for drug delivery. Microbubbles in the bloodstream created a strong ultrasound echo, which allows doctors to trace where the blood is flowing. Whilst at University College London she collaborated with the Wellcome Collection. She was awarded an Engineering and Physical Sciences Research Council Challenging Engineering Award in 2011. That year she joined the Oxford Institute of Biomedical Engineering in 2011. She is a Fellow at St Catherine's College, Oxford. The award allowed her to develop new agents for targeted drug delivery, which allowed clinicians more control in transporting and releasing medical therapeutics. Stride encapsulates deactivated drugs in 'carriers' which can be navigated around the body to a target. She also explored how her novel agents interacted with cells and tissue. Her research could be used to deliver chemotherapy. She has several patents for the creation and imaging of microbubbles. She created the spin-out company AtoCap. AtoCap focussed on the treatment of chronic infections.
Stride was appointed full Professor in 2014. By using custom-designed magnetic arrays, the Stride group have managed to trap particles in tissue several centimetres deep. She demonstrated that it is possible to load oxygen into microbubbles to improve Sonodynamic therapy. She was made a Fellow of the Royal Academy of Engineering in 2017.

Public engagement and diversity

In 2016 Stride was named one of the Top 50 Influential Women in Engineering. She has appeared on BBC Radio 4. She features on a number of YouTube videos with the Royal Institution. She created a revision series with BBC bitesize.

Awards

*