Affiliation:
1. Department of Mechanical Engineering, University of Minnesota, Minneapolis, MN 55455
Abstract
There is currently a need for experimental techniques to assay the biophysical response (water transport or intracellular ice formation, IIF) during freezing in the cells of whole tissue slices. These data are important in understanding and optimizing biomedical applications of freezing, particularly in cryosurgery. This study presents a new technique using a Differential Scanning Calorimeter (DSC) to obtain dynamic and quantitative water transport data in whole tissue slices during freezing. Sprague-Dawley rat liver tissue was chosen as our model system. The DSC was used to monitor quantitatively the heat released by water transported from the unfrozen cell cytoplasm to the partially frozen vascular/extracellular space at 5°C/min. This technique was previously described for use in a single cell suspension system (Devireddy, et al. 1998). A model of water transport was fit to the DSC data using a nonlinear regression curve-fitting technique, which assumes that the rat liver tissue behaves as a two-compartment Krogh cylinder model. The biophysical parameters of water transport for rat liver tissue at 5°C/min were obtained as Lpg = 3.16 x 10−13 m3/Ns (1.9 μm/min-atm), ELp = 265 kJ/mole (63.4 kcal/mole), respectively. These results compare favorably to water transport parameters in whole liver tissue reported in the first part of this study obtained using a freeze substitution (FS) microscopy technique (Pazhayannur and Bischof, 1997). The DSC technique is shown to be a fast, quantitative, and reproducible technique to measure dynamic water transport in tissue systems. However, there are several limitations to the DSC technique: (a) a priori knowledge that the biophysical response is in fact water transport, (b) the technique cannot be used due to machine limitations at cooling rates greater than 40°C/min, and (c) the tissue geometric dimensions (the Krogh model dimensions) and the osmotically inactive cell volumes Vb, must be determined by low-temperature microscopy techniques.
Subject
Physiology (medical),Biomedical Engineering
Reference30 articles.
1. Adam
R.
, AkpinarE., JohannM., et al., 1997, “Place of cryosurgery in the treatment of malignant liver tumors,” Ann. Surgery, Vol. 225, pp. 39–50.
2. American Cancer Society, 1996, Cancer Facts and Figures, American Cancer Society, Atlanta, GA.
3. Bershtein, V. A., and Egorov, V. M., 1994, Differential Scanning Calorimetry of Polymers: Physics, Chemistry, Analysis, Technology, Kemp, T. J., Translation editor, Ellis Horwood.
4. Bevington, P. R., and Robinson, D. K., 1992, Data Reduction and Error Analysis for the Physical Sciences, 2nd ed., McGraw-Hill, New York.
5. Bischof
J. C.
, ChristovK., and RubinskyB., 1993, “A morphological study of cooling rate response in normal and neoplastic human liver tissue: cryosurgical implications,” Cryobiology, Vol. 30, pp. 482–492.
Cited by
34 articles.
订阅此论文施引文献
订阅此论文施引文献,注册后可以免费订阅5篇论文的施引文献,订阅后可以查看论文全部施引文献