Summarizing the FMISO uptake represents a global value for macroscopic tumor parts. As a noninvasive measurement this method seems highly feasible to evaluate the state of oxygenation in subjacent tumors.
Xenon induces metabolic depression in the human brain, suggesting that the inhibition of the glutamatergic system is likely to be of minor significance for the anesthetic action of xenon in vivo.
Radioimmunoimaging of bone marrow was performed for non-invasive detection of skeletal involvement in 15 patients with carcinoma of the breast and 17 patients with malignant lymphomas. Bone marrow scans were performed by means of a monoclonal 99mTc-labelled antibody, directed against NCA-95 and CEA. The presence and extent of skeletal involvement were controlled by skeletal scintigraphy, plain radiographs and CT; bone marrow biopsies were obtained in 19 patients as well. 20 subjects without suspected malignant disease served as controls. Haematopoietic bone marrow was imaged homogeneously and with high contrast in all controls. 15/15 patients with carcinoma of the breast and 10/17 patients with malignant lymphomas had multifocal bone marrow defects due to skeletal metastases. Bone marrow scans revealed significantly more lesions than skeletal scintigraphy both in carcinoma of the breast (p = 0.027) and malignant lymphomas (p = 0.015). Thus, radioimmunoscintigraphy of bone marrow may provide a new, sensitive approach for non-invasive detection of metastatic spread to the skeletal system.
Xenon exerted distinct regional effects on CBF: relative decreases in several cortical, subcortical, and cerebellar areas were accompanied by an increase in white matter. Flow-metabolism coupling was not impaired during xenon anaesthesia.
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