Glass-ceramic-mediated, magnetic-field-induced localized hyperthermia: response of a murine mammary carcinoma
- PMID: 6856765
Glass-ceramic-mediated, magnetic-field-induced localized hyperthermia: response of a murine mammary carcinoma
Abstract
Hyperthermia has been found to be a useful modality for cancer therapy. In this report, a biocompatible, ferrimagnetic glass-ceramic capable of inducing localized hyperthermia by hysteresis heating upon exposure to an alternating magnetic field is presented. When the glass-ceramic was placed in the region of a subcutaneously transplanted, weakly antigenic breast carcinoma and subjected to the magnetic field, sufficient temperature rise was obtained to cause significant (approximately 50%) tumor regrowth delay and a 12% permanent control. The data demonstrate that glass-ceramic-mediated hysteresis heating may be a useful therapeutic approach in the treatment of cancer which offers the advantage of producing a highly localized and predictable tumor volume hyperthermia.
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