Search results for "Tumor Oxygenation"

showing 10 items of 52 documents

The Role of Oxygen Tension Distribution on the Radiation Response of Human Breast Carcinoma

1994

The response of tumors to radiation is heterogeneous even in animal tumor systems where tumors all originate from the same cell culture, are implanted in genetically similar age-matched animals in a constant anatomic locationl. Hence great heterogeneity of response exists even in situations where intrinsic genetic or epigenetic factors are minimally variable. Several metabolic factors are known to influence the probability of tumor control after radiation. These metabolic factors are also known to vary widely between tumors in humans2,3 and even in animal tumor models. Heterogeneous variables include tumor oxygen tension distribution, glutathione content, glucose delivery and utilization ra…

Oncologymedicine.medical_specialtyRadiobiologychemistry.chemical_elementBlood flowTumor Oxygenationmedicine.diseaseOxygenOxygen tensionRadiation sensitivitychemistryInternal medicinemedicineCancer researchCarcinomaDistribution (pharmacology)
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Oxygenation of Mammary Tumors: From Isotransplanted Rodent Tumors to Primary Malignancies in Patients*

1992

The role of oxygen in tumor cell proliferation, radiosensitivity, cytotoxicity of anticancer drugs and hyperthermia treatment has been the subject of a series of investigations (for reviews see Hall, 1988; Teicher et al., 1990, Vaupel et al., 1989a; Vaupel, 1990a,b). Despite the apparent importance of tumor oxygenation, data on pO2 values in solid tumors are mostly derived from experiments on rodents which might not necessarily reflect the variability of the clinical situation. Due to feasible techniques available now, considerable advances have been made in the past few years in the assessment of tumor hypoxia in patients (for reviews see Vaupel et al., 1989a; Vaupel, 1990a). The latter in…

Oncologymedicine.medical_specialtyTumor hypoxiabusiness.industryHyperthermia TreatmentOxygenationTumor OxygenationTailored treatmentmedicine.diseaseBreast cancerInternal medicineMedicineIn patientRadiosensitivitybusiness
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Intratumoral PO2 Histography as Predictive Assay in Advanced Cancer of the Uterine Cervix

1994

Experimental evidence suggests that the hypoxic fraction in a solid tumor may increase its malignant potential and reduce its sensitivity towards nonsurgical treatment modalities such as standard irradiation and certain anticancer agents1–5. However, the clinical importance of tumor hypoxia remains uncertain since valid methods for the routine measurement of intratumoral O2-tensions in patients have so far been lacking.

Oncologymedicine.medical_specialtyUterine cervixTumor hypoxiabusiness.industryInternal medicinemedicineIn patientTumor OxygenationSolid tumorbusinessAdvanced cancerNonsurgical treatment
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The Effect of Nicotinamide on Microcirculatory Function, Tissue Oxygenation and Bioenergetic Status in Rat Tumors

1994

The failure of many attempts to improve tumor oxygenation - and thus the outcome of standard radiotherapy - may be due to the fact that the occurrence of hypoxia in tumors is not solely a result of diffusion-limited “chronic” hypoxia but is also due to temporary flow cessations in microregional tumor perfusion which have been shown to occur in tumor tissue1. As a result, attempts have more recently been made to reduce hypoxia in tumors through the reduction of tumor perfusion fluctuations. The benzamide analog nicotinamide is an agent which has recently received attention in this respect. It has been reported to be an effective, tumor-specific radiosensitizer in several tumor models, an eff…

Radiosensitizermedicine.medical_specialtyNicotinamideBioenergeticsbusiness.industrymedicine.medical_treatmentHypoxia (medical)Tumor OxygenationRadiation therapychemistry.chemical_compoundEndocrinologyTissue oxygenationchemistryInternal medicineCancer researchMedicinemedicine.symptombusinessBenzamide
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Tumor hypoxia and therapeutic resistance

2008

For many years, the identification of tumor hypoxia, its systematic characterization and the assessment of its clinical relevance were not possible due to the lack of methods suitable for the routine measurement of intratumoral oxygen tensions in patients. In the late 1980s, a novel and clinically applicable standardized procedure was established enabling the determination of tumor oxygenation in accessible primary tumors, local recurrences, and metastatic lesions in patients using a computerized polarographic needle electrode system (Vaupel et al. 1991; Hockel et al. 1991). Within a relatively short period of time, the significance of tumor oxygenation for therapy outcome became evident in…

Therapy OutcomeOncologyNeedle electrodemedicine.medical_specialtyMetastatic lesionsTumor hypoxiabusiness.industryTherapeutic resistanceTumor OxygenationInternal medicineMedicineClinical significanceIn patientbusiness
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Tumor Oxygenation and Its Relevance to Tumor Physiology and Treatment

2003

For many years, the identification of tumor hypoxia, its systematic characterization and the assessment of its clinical relevance were not possible due to lack of methods suitable for the routine measurement of intratumoral oxygen tensions in patients. In the late 1980s, a novel and clinically applicable standardized procedure was established enabling the determination of the tissue oxygenation status in primary tumors, local recurrences, and metastatic lesions in patients using a computerized polarographic needle electrode system. Within a relatively short period of time, the significance of tumor oxygenation for therapy outcome became evident in numerous experimental and clinical studies.

Therapy Outcomemedicine.medical_specialtyNeedle electrodeTissue oxygenationMetastatic lesionsTumor hypoxiabusiness.industrymedicineIn patientClinical significanceRadiologyTumor Oxygenationbusiness
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Impact of Various Thermal Doses on the Oxygenation and Blood Flow in Malignant Tumors Upon Localized Hyperthermia

1984

Hyperthermia exhibits various direct cytocidal effects (Dickson, 1977; Overgaard, 1977; Suit, 1977). During heat treatment in vivo, several indirect mechanisms enhance the direct cell-killing capacity of hyperthermia. Therefore, the effective use of hyperthermia can overcome some of the well-known problems involved in modern radiation therapy at least in some malignant tumors.

Tissue temperatureHyperthermiabusiness.industrymedicine.medical_treatmentOxygenationBlood flowTumor Oxygenationmedicine.diseaseRadiation therapyIn vivoAnesthesiamedicinebusinessOxyhemoglobin saturation
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Current Status of Knowledge and Critical Issues in Tumor Oxygenation

1998

In 1972 we started the systematic investigation of oxygenation status in (a) experimental tumor systems in rats and mice [e.g., 1–6], (b) in human tumors xenotransplanted into immune-deficient rnu/rnu-rats [e.g., 7–9], (c) in tumors derived from spontaneously tumorigenic or ras-transformed cell lines [10], and (d) in human tumors in situ [e.g., 11–15] under various pathophysiological conditions using polarographic O2 needle electrodes. In the earlier studies a cryospectrophotometric ex vivomicrotechnique was also used that allowed the measurement of HbO2 saturation in individual red blood cells in tumor microvessels [e.g., 16, 17]. Besides polarographic and cryospectrophotometric microtechn…

TransplantationPathologymedicine.medical_specialtyTumor hypoxiabusiness.industryCell cultureMedicineDistribution (pharmacology)OxygenationTumor OxygenationbusinessPathophysiologyMicrocirculation
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Tumor Vascularity, Hypoxia, and Malignant Progression in Solid Neoplasms

1998

Malignant progression designates the biologic process which transforms a phenotypically normal cell fixed and cooperating within a tissue into a disseminated therapy-resistant lethal disease. In clinical terms this process consists of three major steps (Fig. 1): () the transition from regulated to deregulated cell proliferation, () the emerging ability of the neoplastic cell collectives to induce angiogenesis and to invade other tissues, () the development of metastases and of resistance towards anti-tumor therapies.

Tumor hypoxiabusiness.industryCell growthAngiogenesisCancer researchMedicineNeoplastic cellDiseaseTumor OxygenationMalignant progressionHypoxia (medical)medicine.symptombusiness
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Tumor Oxygenation Under Normobaric and Hyperbaric Hyperoxia

1997

Tumor hypoxia is an important factor limiting the efficiency of sparsely ionizing ra-diation and O2-dependent chemotherapy. Since the tumor pO2 is the result of a dynamic steady state between oxygen supply and O2 consumption of the tumor tissue, hypoxia could be reduced either by increasing the O2-supply or by reducing the O2 demand of the tumor cells. The O2 supply can be improved for instance by (i) increasing the arterial oxy-gen partial pressure, (ii) improving (and homogenizing) the tumor perfusion, or (iii) en-hancing the O2 release from blood into the tissue by right-shifting the HbO2 dissociation curve. Theoretically, it should also be possible to improve tumor oxygenation by a rela…

medicine.medical_specialtyChemotherapyTumor hypoxiabusiness.industryHyperbaric oxygenationmedicine.medical_treatmentOxygen–haemoglobin dissociation curveTumor OxygenationHyperbaric hyperoxiaInternal medicineTumor perfusionCardiologyMedicineRadiosensitivitybusiness
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