|  Help  |  About  |  Contact Us

Publication : Ultrasonic assessment of hepatic blood flow as a marker of mouse hepatocarcinoma.

First Author  Bonnin P Year  2007
Journal  Ultrasound Med Biol Volume  33
Issue  4 Pages  561-70
PubMed ID  17280764 Mgi Jnum  J:121990
Mgi Id  MGI:3712732 Doi  10.1016/j.ultrasmedbio.2006.09.010
Citation  Bonnin P, et al. (2007) Ultrasonic assessment of hepatic blood flow as a marker of mouse hepatocarcinoma. Ultrasound Med Biol 33(4):561-70
abstractText  Two-dimensional color-coded pulsed Doppler ultrasonography (US) with a 12-MHz linear transducer was used to follow tumor growth and neoangiogenesis development in 12 transgenic mice developing a whole liver hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC) induced by the expression of SV40-T antigen. In this model, male mice developed HCC at various temporal and histologic stages (hyperplastic, four-eight wk; nodular, 12 wk; diffuse carcinoma, 16-20 wk), whereas female mice remained tumor free. Seven age-matched tumor-free mice were used as controls. Liver volume was calculated from B-mode images of the abdomen. Blood flow waveforms were recorded from the hepatic tumor-feeding artery upstream from the tumor vessels, allowing quantitative blood flow velocity measurements. Measurements were performed every four weeks from four to 20 weeks. As early as the hyperplastic stage (eight weeks), liver volume was increased by 2.7-fold, hepatic artery peak-systolic blood flow velocities (BFV) by 1.5-fold, end-diastolic BFV by 1.6-fold and mean BFV by 2.0-fold compared with control values (p < 0.001). Differences increased until 20 weeks and peak-systolic reached 90 +/- 6, end-diastolic 54 +/- 5 and mean BFV 48 +/- 5 cm s(-1). Successive measurements of BFV were reproducible and intraobserver repeatability coefficient values were <3 cm s(-1). In contrast, mesenteric artery BFV, which did not supply tumor region, did not show any significant difference with respect to control values. Thus, an increase in BFV constitutes a functional evaluation of tumor vascularity. In preclinical studies in small animals, measurements of liver volume and blood flow velocities in hepatic tumor-feeding artery provide a useful, reproducible, noninvasive, easy-to-repeat tool to monitor tumor growth and neoangiogenesis in hepatocellular carcinoma in mice.
Quick Links:
 
Quick Links:
 

Expression

Publication --> Expression annotations

 

Other

0 Bio Entities

0 Expression