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Nataša Pavšelj

Researcher at University of Ljubljana

Publications -  25
Citations -  1696

Nataša Pavšelj is an academic researcher from University of Ljubljana. The author has contributed to research in topics: Electroporation & Transdermal. The author has an hindex of 16, co-authored 25 publications receiving 1557 citations. Previous affiliations of Nataša Pavšelj include Université catholique de Louvain.

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Electric properties of tissues

TL;DR: The electrical properties of biological tissues and cell pensions have been of interest for over a century for manyreasons, such as the ability to determine the pathways of current flow through the body and, thus, are very important in theanalysis of a wide range of biomedical applications such as functional electrical stimulation and the diagnosis and treatment of various physiological conditions with weakelectric currents, radiofrequency hyperthermia, electro-cardiography, and body composition as mentioned in this paper.
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Dependence of induced transmembrane potential on cell density, arrangement, and cell position inside a cell system

TL;DR: The results for infinite cell suspensions show that the induced TMP depends on both cell volume fraction and cell arrangement, and established from the results for finite volume cell clusters and layers, that there is no radial dependence of induced T MP for cells inside the cluster.
Journal ArticleDOI

The course of tissue permeabilization studied on a mathematical model of a subcutaneous tumor in small animals

TL;DR: The results and the reversible and irreversible thresholds used coincide well with the effectiveness of the electrochemotherapy in real tumors where experiments show antitumor effectiveness for amplitudes higher than 900 V/cm ratio and pronounced antitumors effects at 1300 V/ cm ratio.
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Importance of tumour coverage by sufficiently high local electric field for effective electrochemotherapy

TL;DR: Electrochemotherapy is an effective local treatment of solid tumours which combines delivery of chemotherapeutic drug and electric pulses, and plate electrodes which are noninvasive are better suited for tumours on the surface on the skin, whereas needle electrodes are more appropriate for treating tumours seeded deeper in the skin.