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Open AccessJournal ArticleDOI

Noninvasive measurement of microvascular and interstitial oxygen profiles in a human tumor in SCID mice.

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TLDR
The optically measured microscopic profiles of PO2 with high spatial resolution are measured by combining an oxygen-dependent phosphorescence quenching method and a transparent tissue preparation to permit noninvasive evaluations of oxygen-modifying agents and offer further mechanistic information about tumor pathophysiology in tissue preparations where the surface of the tissue can be observed.
Abstract
Simultaneous measurements of intravascular and interstitial oxygen partial pressure (PO2) in any tissue have not previously been reported, despite the importance of oxygen in health and in disease. This is due to the limitations of current techniques, both invasive and noninvasive. We have optically measured microscopic profiles of PO2 with high spatial resolution in subcutaneous tissue and transplanted tumors in mice by combining an oxygen-dependent phosphorescence quenching method and a transparent tissue preparation. The strengths of our approach include the ability to follow PO2 in the same location for several weeks and to relate these measurements to local blood flow and vascular architecture. Our results show that (i) PO2 values in blood vessels in well-vascularized regions of a human colon adenocarcinoma xenograft are comparable to those in surrounding arterioles and venules, (ii) carbogen (95% O2/5% CO2) breathing increases microvascular PO2 in tumors, and (iii) in unanesthetized and anesthetized mice PO2 drops to hypoxic values at < 200 microns from isolated vessels but drops by < 5 mmHg (1 mmHg = 133 Pa) in highly vascularized tumor regions. Our method should permit noninvasive evaluations of oxygen-modifying agents and offer further mechanistic information about tumor pathophysiology in tissue preparations where the surface of the tissue can be observed.

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Journal ArticleDOI

Interstitial pH and pO2 gradients in solid tumors in vivo: high-resolution measurements reveal a lack of correlation.

TL;DR: The first combined, high-resolution measurements of interstitial pH and pO2 profiles between adjacent vessels in a human tumor xenograft are reported, using fluorescence ratio imaging and phosphorescence quenching microscopy.
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Homing and cellular traffic in lymph nodes

TL;DR: New insights are covered into the organization and microvascular specialization of LNs, the guidance mechanisms that allow lymphocytes and antigen-presenting cells to find their correct place in the nodal parenchyma; and the role of afferent lymph flow in LN function.
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Quantitative optical spectroscopy for tissue diagnosis

TL;DR: This review describes optical interactions pursued for biomedical applications (fluorescence, fluorescence lifetime, phosphorescence, and Raman from cells, cultures, and tissues) and provides a descriptive framework for light interaction based upon tissue absorption and scattering properties.
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Delivery of molecular and cellular medicine to solid tumors

TL;DR: A paradigm of analysis and synthesis has allowed us to obtain a better understanding of physiological barriers in solid tumors, and to develop novel strategies to exploit and/or to overcome these barriers for improved cancer detection and treatment.
Journal ArticleDOI

Angiogenesis Inhibitors Endostatin or TNP-470 Reduce Intimal Neovascularization and Plaque Growth in Apolipoprotein E–Deficient Mice

TL;DR: Prolonged treatment with either angiogenesis inhibitor reduced plaque growth and intimal neovascularization in apoE -/- mice, and these results suggest that intimal nvascularization may promote plaque development.
References
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Book

Drug resistance in oncology

TL;DR: The role of hormones, growth factors and oncogenes: acquisition of antioestrogen resistance in breast cancer, Robert Clarke and Marc E. Chapman and Garth Powis and the role of extracellular matrix in tumour invasion, metastasis and angiogenesis are examined.
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