In previous work the phenomenon of sonoluminescence (SL) has been used to find the conditions in which transient cavitation during exposure to ultrasound is likely to be maximum. This paper reports the effect of therapeutic ultrasound on growth of mouse tumour cells in monolayer culture when the cells are insonated either at a pressure antinode or at a pressure node in a standing wave ultrasound field that is known to produce strong bands of SL at the pressure antinodes. Reduced cell numbers 72 h after insonation were recorded when the cells were insonated at an antinode but not when they were at a node. The possibility that this effect might be an artefact of the experimental system, and further experiments that could elucidate the nature of the damage, are discussed.
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