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Effect of Functional Magnetic Particles on Radiofrequency Capacitive Heating

Magnetic particles (magnetite) were used to make radio frequency (RF) capacitive hyperthermia effective to a specific site. In an agar phantom experiment, a magnetite‐containing agar piece was buried in a large agar phantom and heated by an 8 MHz‐RF capacitive heating device. The magnetite‐containin...

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Detalles Bibliográficos
Autores principales: Shinkai, Masashige, Ueda, Kousuke, Ohtsu, Shinji, Honda, Hiroyuki, Kohri, Kenjirou, Kobayashi1, Takeshi
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Blackwell Publishing Ltd 1999
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5926119/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/10429664
http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/j.1349-7006.1999.tb00803.x
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author Shinkai, Masashige
Ueda, Kousuke
Ohtsu, Shinji
Honda, Hiroyuki
Kohri, Kenjirou
Kobayashi1, Takeshi
author_facet Shinkai, Masashige
Ueda, Kousuke
Ohtsu, Shinji
Honda, Hiroyuki
Kohri, Kenjirou
Kobayashi1, Takeshi
author_sort Shinkai, Masashige
collection PubMed
description Magnetic particles (magnetite) were used to make radio frequency (RF) capacitive hyperthermia effective to a specific site. In an agar phantom experiment, a magnetite‐containing agar piece was buried in a large agar phantom and heated by an 8 MHz‐RF capacitive heating device. The magnetite‐containing agar piece was heated more than the magnetite‐free agar phantom, and the specific adsorption rate in the phantom was increased 1.5 times by the magnetite particles. The temperature distribution in the large agar phantom showed that the highest temperature was obtained at the center of the magnetite‐containing piece. The rate of temperature increase was approximately proportional to the magnetite concentration to the power 0.8. This method was applied to an in vivo experiment using a pig. Magnetite was prepared as a colloidal material dispersed in a carboxymethylcellulose solution (CMC‐Mag) and intramuscularly injected in the pig femur. As a result of 8 MHz‐RF heating, the temperature at the CMC‐Mag‐injected point increased to over 43°C after 7 min, while the temperature at a point without magnetite was under 40°C at the same time. The specific adsorption rate in the magnetite‐containing tissue was twice that of the magnetite‐ free tissue. In addition, the time required to reach a temperature of over 43°C was only 7 min, while it was over 15 min in the case without the CMC‐Mag.
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spelling pubmed-59261192018-05-11 Effect of Functional Magnetic Particles on Radiofrequency Capacitive Heating Shinkai, Masashige Ueda, Kousuke Ohtsu, Shinji Honda, Hiroyuki Kohri, Kenjirou Kobayashi1, Takeshi Jpn J Cancer Res Article Magnetic particles (magnetite) were used to make radio frequency (RF) capacitive hyperthermia effective to a specific site. In an agar phantom experiment, a magnetite‐containing agar piece was buried in a large agar phantom and heated by an 8 MHz‐RF capacitive heating device. The magnetite‐containing agar piece was heated more than the magnetite‐free agar phantom, and the specific adsorption rate in the phantom was increased 1.5 times by the magnetite particles. The temperature distribution in the large agar phantom showed that the highest temperature was obtained at the center of the magnetite‐containing piece. The rate of temperature increase was approximately proportional to the magnetite concentration to the power 0.8. This method was applied to an in vivo experiment using a pig. Magnetite was prepared as a colloidal material dispersed in a carboxymethylcellulose solution (CMC‐Mag) and intramuscularly injected in the pig femur. As a result of 8 MHz‐RF heating, the temperature at the CMC‐Mag‐injected point increased to over 43°C after 7 min, while the temperature at a point without magnetite was under 40°C at the same time. The specific adsorption rate in the magnetite‐containing tissue was twice that of the magnetite‐ free tissue. In addition, the time required to reach a temperature of over 43°C was only 7 min, while it was over 15 min in the case without the CMC‐Mag. Blackwell Publishing Ltd 1999-06 /pmc/articles/PMC5926119/ /pubmed/10429664 http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/j.1349-7006.1999.tb00803.x Text en
spellingShingle Article
Shinkai, Masashige
Ueda, Kousuke
Ohtsu, Shinji
Honda, Hiroyuki
Kohri, Kenjirou
Kobayashi1, Takeshi
Effect of Functional Magnetic Particles on Radiofrequency Capacitive Heating
title Effect of Functional Magnetic Particles on Radiofrequency Capacitive Heating
title_full Effect of Functional Magnetic Particles on Radiofrequency Capacitive Heating
title_fullStr Effect of Functional Magnetic Particles on Radiofrequency Capacitive Heating
title_full_unstemmed Effect of Functional Magnetic Particles on Radiofrequency Capacitive Heating
title_short Effect of Functional Magnetic Particles on Radiofrequency Capacitive Heating
title_sort effect of functional magnetic particles on radiofrequency capacitive heating
topic Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5926119/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/10429664
http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/j.1349-7006.1999.tb00803.x
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