Literature DB >> 27442884

A novel strategy combining magnetic particle hyperthermia pulses with enhanced performance binary ferrite carriers for effective in vitro manipulation of primary human osteogenic sarcoma cells.

Antonios Makridis1, Magdalini Tziomaki2, Konstantina Topouridou2, Maria P Yavropoulou2, John G Yovos2, Orestis Kalogirou1, Theodoros Samaras1, Mavroeidis Angelakeris1.   

Abstract

The present study examines the heating efficiency of a combination of manganese or cobalt ferrites in a binary (Co- or Mn-) ferrite nanoparticle form with magnetite, covered with citric acid to improve biocompatibility. The nanoparticle synthesis is based on the aqueous co-precipitation of proper salts, a facile, low-cost, environmentally friendly and high yield synthetic approach. By detailed structural and magnetic characterisation, the direct influence of structural and magnetic features on magnetic hyperthermia concludes to optimum heating efficiency. At a second stage, best performing magnetic nanoparticles undergo in vitro testing in three cell lines: one cancer cell line and two reference healthy cell lines. Both binary ferrite (MnFe2O4/Fe3O4 and CoFe2O4/Fe3O4) appear to be internalised and well tolerated by the cells while a versatile hyperthermia protocol is attempted in an effort to further improve their in vitro performance. Within this protocol, hyperthermia sequences are split in two runs with an intermediate 48 h time interval cell incubation stage while in each run a variable field mode (single or multiple pulses) is applied. Single-pulse field mode represents a typical hyperthermia application scheme where cells undergo the thermal shock continuously. On the other hand multiple-pulses mode refers to multiple, much shorter in duration AC field changes (field ON/OFFs), at each hyperthermia run, resulting eventually in high heating rate and much more harmful cell treatment. Consequently, we propose a novel series of improved performance heat mediators based on ferrite structures which show maximum efficiency at cancer cells when combined with a versatile multiple-pulse hyperthermia module.

Entities:  

Keywords:  Magnetic particle hyperthermia; magnetic nanoparticles; multiple-pulses AMF; thermal dose

Mesh:

Substances:

Year:  2016        PMID: 27442884     DOI: 10.1080/02656736.2016.1216183

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Int J Hyperthermia        ISSN: 0265-6736            Impact factor:   3.914


  3 in total

1.  In-situ particles reorientation during magnetic hyperthermia application: Shape matters twice.

Authors:  Konstantinos Simeonidis; M Puerto Morales; Marzia Marciello; Makis Angelakeris; Patricia de la Presa; Ana Lazaro-Carrillo; Andrea Tabero; Angeles Villanueva; Oksana Chubykalo-Fesenko; David Serantes
Journal:  Sci Rep       Date:  2016-12-06       Impact factor: 4.379

Review 2.  Magnetic Hyperthermia for Cancer Treatment: Main Parameters Affecting the Outcome of In Vitro and In Vivo Studies.

Authors:  Vânia Vilas-Boas; Félix Carvalho; Begoña Espiña
Journal:  Molecules       Date:  2020-06-22       Impact factor: 4.411

3.  Intermittent time-set technique controlling the temperature of magnetic-hyperthermia-ablation for tumor therapy.

Authors:  Xiuzhen Tang; Yanjun Xu; Jie Chen; Tao Ying; Longchen Wang; Lixin Jiang; Yan Wang; Zhenhai Wang; Yi Ling; Fengjuan Wang; Li Yao; Haitao Ran; Zhigang Wang; Bing Hu; Yuanyi Zheng
Journal:  RSC Adv       Date:  2018-05-03       Impact factor: 4.036

  3 in total

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