Search results for "Normal"
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Effect of Localized Hyperthermia on Tumor Blood Flow and Oxygenation
1984
Hyperthermia has been shown to have a lethal effect in tumor cell cultures, particularly at temperatures above 42°C.1 Moreover, it has been demonstrated that hyperthermia retards the growth rate of certain types of malignant tumors and can be effective in completely eradicating some tumors without any major damage to normal tissue.2,3,4 The differential response of solid tumors in vivo to heat treatment in comparison to normal tissue probably results from several factors. Among these the in vivo micro-environment seems to play a decisive role. In general, the interstitial milieu of solid tumors is characterized by tissue hypoxia and anoxia5,6 and by severe tissue acidosis.7 These unfavorabl…
Laser Doppler flowmetry in subepidermal tumours and in normal skin of rats during localized ultrasound hyperthermia.
1988
Laser Doppler flowmetry has been applied to normal skin and to subepidermal tumours during localized ultrasound hyperthermia in the rat. In normal skin, 40 degrees C hyperthermia only induced a marginal increase in the red blood cell flux. Significant increases occurred after 20 min at 42 degrees C and after 4 min at 44 degrees C. During 44 degrees C hyperthermia maximum fluxes were reached after 24 min. Thereafter, the flow declined and finally approached preheating values. In contrast, in subepidermal tumours 40 degrees C hyperthermia on the average induced a slight decrease of the flux. During 42 degrees C hyperthermia a significant flow decrease was found after 40 min of heating. Follow…
TISSUE OXYGENATION AND NORMAL AND HYPERTHERMIC CONDITIONS
1981
Publisher Summary This chapter describes the tissue oxygenation and normal and hyperthermic conditions. The knowledge of the effect of hyperthermia on tumor and normal tissue blood flow is important not only for the effect of hyperthermia on hypoxic cells at the time of radiation, but also for differential tumor heating. There is considerable evidence from plethsmography that an elevation of normal tissue temperature to 41°C is accompanied by a considerable increase in blood flow. The chapter discusses studies that were conducted to examine changes in the microenvironment of normal and tumor tissue as measured directly with ultramicroelectrodes. In situ studies were carried out in fourth ge…
Pathophysiological aspects of hyperthermia
1992
Blood flow in many rapidly growing tumors is sluggish leading to an impairment of convective heat dissipation which facilitates tumor heating compared to normal tissues. In addition, the compromised microcirculation causes a hostile metabolic micromilieu which can modulate the therapeutic effect of heat. After clinically relevant heat doses, a shut-down of tumor microcirculation is often observed creating a “heat-reservoir” and aggravating tumor hypoxia, acidosis, and substrate and energy depletion, factors which are known to greatly enhance tumor cell killing by heat. Since the mechanisms described are mostly derived from experimental results on fast-growing animal tumors, the clinical rel…
Effect of hyperthermia on tumor blood flow.
1984
Differences in blood perfusion rates between tumors and normal tissue can be utilized to selectively heat many solid tumors. Blood flow in normal tissues is considerably increased at temperatures commonly applied during localized hyperthermia. In contrast, tumor blood flow may respond to localized heat typically in two different blood flow patterns: Flow may either decrease continuously with increasing exposure time and/or temperature or flow may exhibit a transient increase followed by a decline. A decrease in blood flow at high thermal doses can be observed in most of the tumors, whereas an increase in flow at low thermal doses seems to occur less frequently. The inhibition of blood flow …
An Unexplained Congenital Disorder of Glycosylation-II in a Child with Neurohepatic Involvement, Hypercholesterolemia and Hypoceruloplasminemia
2017
We report on a 12-year-old adopted boy with psychomotor disability, absence seizures, and normal brain MRI. He showed increased (but initially, at 5 months, normal) serum cholesterol, increased alkaline phosphatases, transiently increased transaminases and hypoceruloplasminemia with normal serum and urinary copper. Blood levels of immunoglobulins, haptoglobin, antithrombin, and factor XI were normal. A type 2 serum transferrin isoelectrofocusing and hypoglycosylation of apoCIII pointed to a combined N- and O-glycosylation defect. Neither CDG panel analysis with 79 CDG-related genes, nor whole exome sequencing revealed the cause of this CDG. Whole genome sequencing was not performed since th…
Multitemporal fusion of Landsat and MERIS images
2011
Monitoring Earth dynamics from current and future observation satellites is one of the most important objectives for the remote sensing community. In this regard, the exploitation of image time series from sensors with different characteristics provides an opportunity to increase the knowledge about environmental changes, which are needed in many operational applications, such as monitoring vegetation dynamics and land cover/use changes. Many studies in the literature have proven that high spatial resolution sensors like Landsat are very useful for monitoring land cover changes. However, the cloud cover probability of many areas and the 15-days temporal resolution restrict its use to monito…
Boundary regularity and the uniform convergence of quasiconformal mappings
1979
Diffusion equations with negentropy applied to denoise mammographic images.
2006
Mammography is a radiographic technique used for the detection of breast lesions. The analysis of the digital image normally requires a previous application of filters as a preprocessing step to reduce the noise level of the image, while preserving important details to carry out a suitable diagnostic. In the literature, there are a large amount of denoising techniques applied to different medical images. In this work we have studied the performance of a diffusive filter with a stopping condition based on the statistical concept of negentropy, applied to denoise mammographic images. The negentropy has been succesfully prove with other denoising methods as independent component analysis by th…
Molecular basis of filamin a-filGAP interaction and its impairment in congenital disorders associated with filamin a mutations
2008
Background Mutations in filamin A (FLNa), an essential cytoskeletal protein with multiple binding partners, cause developmental anomalies in humans. Methodology/Principal Findings We determined the structure of the 23rd Ig repeat of FLNa (IgFLNa23) that interacts with FilGAP, a Rac-specific GTPase-activating protein and regulator of cell polarity and movement, and the effect of the three disease-related mutations on this interaction. A combination of NMR structural analysis and in silico modeling revealed the structural interface details between the C and D β-strands of the IgFLNa23 and the C-terminal 32 residues of FilGAP. Mutagenesis of the predicted key interface residues confirmed the b…