1961
DOI: 10.1016/s0022-5347(17)65169-3
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The Early Histologic Changes Following Electrocoagulation

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Cited by 57 publications
(31 citation statements)
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“…Those authors showed no significant difference between perivascular and non-perivascular hcc in terms of rates of complete ablation, local tumour progression, morbidity, and mortality 48 . Their findings contrast with the results of a study by Lu et al 49 of 31 perivascular hcc tumours, which suggested that the efficacy of rfa is affected by the location of the tumour, which was also suggested in studies by McGahan et al 35 and Lounsberry et al 36 . Theories suggest that cirrhotic tissue could enable better thermal ablation through the "oven effect" 50 , which posits that the increased thickness of cirrhotic tissue around the nodule works as a thermal insulator, avoiding dispersion of the heat generated around the rfa electrode.…”
Section: 21contrasting
confidence: 65%
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“…Those authors showed no significant difference between perivascular and non-perivascular hcc in terms of rates of complete ablation, local tumour progression, morbidity, and mortality 48 . Their findings contrast with the results of a study by Lu et al 49 of 31 perivascular hcc tumours, which suggested that the efficacy of rfa is affected by the location of the tumour, which was also suggested in studies by McGahan et al 35 and Lounsberry et al 36 . Theories suggest that cirrhotic tissue could enable better thermal ablation through the "oven effect" 50 , which posits that the increased thickness of cirrhotic tissue around the nodule works as a thermal insulator, avoiding dispersion of the heat generated around the rfa electrode.…”
Section: 21contrasting
confidence: 65%
“…The maximum temperature obtained and the duration of exposure to the heat affect the cell-kill zone 35,36 , but a major limitation is the possibility of a heat-sink effect produced by large vessels (>3 mm) near the ablation zone. The blood current can prevent complete necrosis of nearby tumour cells, potentially leading to positive margins.…”
Section: 21mentioning
confidence: 99%
“…When tumor cells are heated to temperatures above 45°to 50°C for more than 3 minutes, intracellular protein denaturation and melting of lipid bilayers results in direct tumor cell death. [7][8][9][10] RFA uses alternating current passed across needle electrode arrays placed directly into the tumor. Ionic stimulation induced by the alternating current in tissue surrounding the electrode array produces gradual frictional heating, and the tissue temperatures rise to 80°to 110°C, which results in coagulative necrosis of the tissue in proximity to the electrode.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…When tumor cells are heated above 45-50°C, intracellular proteins are denatured and cell membranes are destroyed through dissolution and melting of lipid bilayers [7,8]. Radiofrequency ablation (RFA) is a localized thermal treatment technique designed to produce tumor destruction by heating tumor tissue to temperatures that exceed 60°C.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%