Literature DB >> 11563755

Cryosurgery of normal and tumor tissue in the dorsal skin flap chamber: Part II--injury response.

N E Hoffmann1, J C Bischof.   

Abstract

It has been hypothesized that vascular injury may be an important mechanism of cryosurgical destruction in addition to direct cellular destruction. In this study we report correlation of tissue and vascular injury after cryosurgery to the temperature history during cryosurgery in an in vivo microvascular preparation. The dorsal skin flap chamber implanted in the Copenhagen rat, was chosen as the cryosurgical model. Cryosurgery was performed in the chamber on either normal skin or tumor tissue propagated from an AT-1 Dunning rat prostate tumor, as described in a companion paper (Hoffmann and Bischof, 2001). The vasculature was then viewed at 3 and 7 days after cryoinjury under brightfield and FITC-labeled dextran contrast enhancement to assess the vascular injury. The results showed that there was complete destruction of the vasculature in the center of the lesion and a gradual return to normal patency moving radially outward. Histologic examination showed a band of inflammation near the edge of a large necrotic region at both 3 and 7 days after cryosurgery. The area of vascular injury observed with FITC-labeled dextran quantitatively corresponded to the area of necrosis observed in histologic section, and the size of the lesion for tumor and normal tissue was similar at 3 days post cryosurgery. At 7 days after cryosurgery, the lesion was smaller for both tissues, with the normal tissue lesion being much smaller than the tumor tissue lesion. A comparison of experimental injury data to the thermal model validated in a companion paper (Hoffmann and Bischof 2001) suggested that the minimum temperature required for causing necrosis was -15.6 +/- 4.3 degrees C in tumor tissue and -19.0 +/- 4.4 degrees C in normal tissue. The other thermal parameters manifested at the edge of the lesion included a cooling rate of approximately 28 degrees C/min, 0 hold time, and a approximately 9 degrees C/min thawing rate. The conditions at the edge of the lesion are much less severe than the thermal conditions required for direct cellular destruction of AT-1 cells and tissues in vitro. These results are consistent with the hypothesis that vascular-mediated injury is responsible for the majority of injury at the edge of the frozen region in microvascular perfused tissue.

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Year:  2001        PMID: 11563755     DOI: 10.1115/1.1385839

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  J Biomech Eng        ISSN: 0148-0731            Impact factor:   2.097


  8 in total

1.  The apparent critical isotherm for cryoinsult-induced osteonecrotic lesions in emu femoral heads.

Authors:  Jessica E Goetz; Douglas R Pedersen; Duane A Robinson; Michael G Conzemius; Thomas E Baer; Thomas D Brown
Journal:  J Biomech       Date:  2008-06-17       Impact factor: 2.712

2.  Nanoparticle delivered vascular disrupting agents (VDAs): use of TNF-alpha conjugated gold nanoparticles for multimodal cancer therapy.

Authors:  Mithun M Shenoi; Isabelle Iltis; Jeunghwan Choi; Nathan A Koonce; Gregory J Metzger; Robert J Griffin; John C Bischof
Journal:  Mol Pharm       Date:  2013-04-17       Impact factor: 4.939

3.  Pre-conditioning cryosurgery: cellular and molecular mechanisms and dynamics of TNF-α enhanced cryotherapy in an in vivo prostate cancer model system.

Authors:  Jing Jiang; Raghav Goel; Stephen Schmechel; Gregory Vercellotti; Colleen Forster; John Bischof
Journal:  Cryobiology       Date:  2010-10-20       Impact factor: 2.487

4.  Biphasic investigation of tissue mechanical response during freezing front propagation.

Authors:  Jamie Wright; Bumsoo Han; Cheng-Jen Chuong
Journal:  J Biomech Eng       Date:  2012-06       Impact factor: 2.097

Review 5.  Adjuvant approaches to enhance cryosurgery.

Authors:  Raghav Goel; Kyle Anderson; Joel Slaton; Franz Schmidlin; Greg Vercellotti; John Belcher; John C Bischof
Journal:  J Biomech Eng       Date:  2009-07       Impact factor: 2.097

6.  Tumor necrosis factor-alpha-induced accentuation in cryoinjury: mechanisms in vitro and in vivo.

Authors:  Jing Jiang; Raghav Goel; M Arif Iftekhar; Rachana Visaria; John D Belcher; Gregory M Vercellotti; John C Bischof
Journal:  Mol Cancer Ther       Date:  2008-08       Impact factor: 6.261

Review 7.  Intravital microscopy of tumor angiogenesis and regression in the dorsal skin fold chamber: mechanistic insights and preclinical testing of therapeutic strategies.

Authors:  Gudrun E Koehl; Andreas Gaumann; Edward K Geissler
Journal:  Clin Exp Metastasis       Date:  2009-02-04       Impact factor: 5.150

8.  Thermostability of biological systems: fundamentals, challenges, and quantification.

Authors:  Xiaoming He
Journal:  Open Biomed Eng J       Date:  2011-04-12
  8 in total

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