| Literature DB >> 23662149 |
Gabriella Hegyi1, Gyula P Szigeti, András Szász.
Abstract
Hyperthermia means overheating of the living object completely or partly. Hyperthermia, the procedure of raising the temperature of a part of or the whole body above normal for a defined period of time, is applied alone or as an adjunctive with various established cancer treatment modalities such as radiotherapy and chemotherapy. However, hyperthermia is not generally accepted as conventional therapy. The problem is its controversial performance. The controversy is originated from the complications of the deep heating and the focusing of the heat effect. The idea of oncothermia solves the selective deep action on nearly cellular resolution. We would like to demonstrate the force and perspectives of oncothermia, as a highly specialized hyperthermia in clinical oncology. Our aim is to prove the ability of oncothermia to be a candidate to become a widely accepted modality of the standard cancer care. We would like to show the proofs and the challenges of the hyperthermia and oncothermia applications to provide the presently available data and summarize the knowledge in the topic. Like many early stage therapies, oncothermia lacks adequate treatment experience and long-range, comprehensive statistics that can help us optimize its use for all indications.Entities:
Year: 2013 PMID: 23662149 PMCID: PMC3638606 DOI: 10.1155/2013/672873
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Evid Based Complement Alternat Med ISSN: 1741-427X Impact factor: 2.629
Figure 1The cell-destruction ability of oncothermia is three times higher than of conventional hyperthermia at the same 42°C temperature (single shot treatment, 30 min). Pumping the same energy as for temperature 42°C, but cooling the lesion by outside water-bolus (to 38°C temperature), the efficacy of the cell-destruction remained much higher in oncothermia than in hyperthermia at 42°C temperature.
Figure 2Oncothermia needs less thermal energy to make the same distortion than the classical hyperthermia does. Part of the thermal energy is replaced by the electric field.
Figure 3Upper panel: DAPI staining (stains the double strains of DNA only); lower panel: TUNEL-FITC staining (enzymatic label of the strain-break of the DNA). TUNEL is typical for necrosis (diffuse staining) in hyperthermia and for apoptosis (staining of nuclei locations) in oncothermia treatments.
Figure 4Lethality comparison with traditional hyperthermia in vitro experiments (fixed suspension sample): HL-60 leukemia cell line.