Radiofrequency hyperthermia with successive monitoring of its effects on tumors using NMR spectroscopy.

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RESUMO

Radiofrequency (rf) hyperthermia was generated on rat glioma inoculated s.c. in CD Fisher rats by applying the rf pulse using the surface coil in the NMR spectrometer, and the effect was monitored successively in the same spectrometer by measuring 31P NMR spectra and 1H NMR images. In the 31P NMR spectrum at the preirradiation stage, nucleoside triphosphate peaks and a phosphomonoester peak were high and a Pi peak was low. After a rf pulse at a power of 5 W was applied continuously for 60 min, the nucleoside triphosphate peaks decreased and the Pi peak increased immediately, resulting finally in a dominant Pi peak pattern within 30 min in all 10 cases examined. These spectral changes occurred much earlier than the histological changes and lasted for at least 7 days. By the 1H NMR imaging, the necrotic region was detected as a high-intensity lesion in spin echo and inversion recovery images 2 days after the irradiation. There were no changes either in the spectrum or in 1H NMR images in any of 8 cases after irradiation with a rf pulse of less than 3 W. Thus, we could generate rf hyperthermia with the NMR spectrometer and the effects were monitored sensitively with the same spectrometer. It can be concluded that the NMR device can be used not only for diagnosis but also as a therapeutic tool.

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