60 research outputs found
Preservation of tumour oxygen after hyperbaric oxygenation monitored by magnetic resonance imaging
Hyperbaric oxygen (HBO) has been proposed to reduce tumour hypoxia by increasing the dissolved molecular oxygen in tissue. Using a non-invasive magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) technique, we monitored the changes in MRI signal intensity after HBO exposure because dissolved paramagnetic molecular oxygen itself shortens the T1 relation time. SCCVII tumour cells transplanted in mice were used. The molecular oxygen-enhanced MR images were acquired using an inversion recovery-preparation fast low angle shot (IR-FLASH) sequence sensitizing the paramagnetic effects of molecular oxygen using a 4.7 tesla MR system. MR signal of muscles decreased rapidly and returned to the control level within 40 min after decompression, whereas that of tumours decreased gradually and remained at a high level 60 min after HBO exposure. In contrast, the signal from the tumours in the normobaric oxygen group showed no significant change. Our data suggested that MR signal changes of tumours and muscles represent an alternation of extravascular oxygenation. The preserving tumour oxygen concentration after HBO exposure may be important regarding adjuvant therapy for cancer patients. © 2000 Cancer Research Campaig
Transient differential reflectivity of ferromagnetic and paramagnetic phases in the bilayered manganite La1.24Sr1.76Mn2O7
Photoinduced effects in a single crystal of bilayered manganites,
La2-2xSr1+2xMn2O7 (x=0.38), were investigated in a wide range of temperatures
by pump-probe measurement at a photon energy of 1.6eV. In a ferromagnetic
metallic state, significant enhancement of positive rise in differential
reflectivity with a slow relaxing time of hundred picoseconds was observed just
below Tc=127K, indicating that the reflectivity change with the slow relaxation
time constant is induced by laser heating. We have also observed an
unconventional fast relaxing component that has a time constant of the order of
ten picoseconds. This fast relaxing component, whose absolute value has an
asymmetric peak at Tc, is presumably due to short-range correlation of
Jahn-Teller distortion.Comment: 13 pages, 4 figures, accepted to Solid State Communication
Atomic collision dynamics in optical lattices
We simulate collisions between two atoms, which move in an optical lattice
under the dipole-dipole interaction. The model describes simultaneously the two
basic dynamical processes, namely the Sisyphus cooling of single atoms, and the
light-induced inelastic collisions between them. We consider the J=1/2 -> J=3/2
laser cooling transition for Cs, Rb and Na. We find that the hotter atoms in a
thermal sample are selectively lost or heated by the collisions, which modifies
the steady state distribution of atomic velocities, reminiscent of the
evaporative cooling process.Comment: 17 pages, 15 figure
Phase II trial of radiotherapy after hyperbaric oxygenation with chemotherapy for high-grade gliomas
We conducted a phase II trial to evaluate the efficacy and toxicity of radiotherapy immediately after hyperbaric oxygenation (HBO) with chemotherapy in adults with high-grade gliomas. Patients with histologically confirmed high-grade gliomas were administered radiotherapy in daily 2 Gy fractions for 5 consecutive days per week up to a total dose of 60 Gy. Each fraction was administered immediately after HBO with the period of time from completion of decompression to irradiation being less than 15 min. Chemotherapy consisted of procarbazine, nimustine (ACNU) and vincristine and was administered during and after radiotherapy. A total of 41 patients (31 patients with glioblastoma and 10 patients with grade 3 gliomas) were enrolled. All 41 patients were able to complete a total radiotherapy dose of 60 Gy immediately after HBO with one course of concurrent chemotherapy. Of 30 assessable patients, 17 (57%) had an objective response including four CR and 13 PR. The median time to progression and the median survival time in glioblastoma patients were 12.3 months and 17.3 months, respectively. On univariate analysis, histologic grade (P=0.0001) and Karnofsky performance status (P=0.036) had a significant impact on survival, and on multivariate analysis, histologic grade alone was a significant prognostic factor for survival (P=0.001). Although grade 4 leukopenia and grade 4 thrombocytopenia occurred in 10 and 7% of all patients, respectively, these were transient with no patients developing neutropenic fever or intracranial haemorrhage. No serious nonhaematological or late toxicities were seen. These results indicated that radiotherapy delivered immediately after HBO with chemotherapy was safe with virtually no late toxicity in patients with high-grade gliomas. Further studies are required to strictly evaluate the effectiveness of radiotherapy after HBO for these tumours
DISTRIBUTION OF THE EFFECTIVE CONJUGATION LENGTH OF POLYTHIOPHENE DETERMINED BY ITS ABSORPTION AND |χ (3)
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