Laser-induced thermal therapy is an intuitive procedure for treating difficult intracranial neoplasms. As with any other procedure, patient selection and lesion selection are important factors in determining outcome.
We report on a pilot study showing a proof of concept for the passive delivery of nanoshells to an orthotopic tumor where they induce a local, confined therapeutic response distinct from that of normal brain resulting in the photothermal ablation of canine transmissible venereal tumor (cTVT) in a canine brain model. cTVT fragments grown in severe combined immunodeficient mice were successfully inoculated in the parietal lobe of immunosuppressed, mixed-breed hound dogs. A single dose of near-IR (NIR)-absorbing, 150-nm nanoshells was infused i.v. and allowed time to passively accumulate in the intracranial tumors, which served as a proxy for an orthotopic brain metastasis. The nanoshells accumulated within the intracranial cTVT, suggesting that its neovasculature represented an interruption of the normal blood-brain barrier.
We report noninvasive modulation of in vivo tumor radiation response using gold nanoshells. Mild-temperature hyperthermia generated by near-infrared illumination of gold nanoshell-laden tumors, noninvasively quantified by magnetic resonance temperature imaging, causes an early increase in tumor perfusion that reduces the hypoxic fraction of tumors. A subsequent radiation dose induces vascular disruption with extensive tumor necrosis. Gold nanoshells sequestered in the perivascular space mediate these two tumor vasculature-focused effects to improve radiation response of tumors. This novel integrated antihypoxic and localized vascular disrupting therapy can potentially be combined with other conventional antitumor therapies.
This study investigates the natural history and optimal imaging modality of penetrating atherosclerotic ulcers of the aorta. Methods: We reviewed our experience with 29 penetrating ulcers in 18 patients. Computed tomography (17 patients), magnetic resonance imaging (nine patients), and aortography (five patients) were used for diagnosis and follow-up. Patients were typically elderly (average age 74 years) and had hypertension and coronary artery disease. Ulcers were most common in the distal descending thoracic aorta (31 %) and were characterized by a discrete ulcer crater (100%) and thickened aortic wall (89%). Modes of presentation included chest or back pain in four patients, distal embolization in two patients, and abnormal chest radiography results in one; the remaining were incidental findings. Results: Follow-up was available in ten patients with 17 ulcers from 1 to 7 years. Recurrent pain occurred in two patients, recurrent embolization occurred in one patient, and seven patients remained symptom free. Progression to saccular pseudo aneurysm occurred in five ulcers, and fusiform aneurysm occurred in two ulcers. Two ulcers were associated with an increase in aortic diameter, and nine ulcers did not change. There were no cases of aortic dissection or rupture in the follow-up period. There were no deaths and only one patient underwent resection.
Conclusion:The natural history of penetrating atherosclerotic ulcers is one of progressive aortic enlargement, with saccular and fusiform aneurysms the result if follow-up is sufficient. Aortic dissection, aortic rupture, and embolization can also occur but are less common. Contrast-enhanced computed tomography is the primary imaging modality.
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