25 results on '"Gourevitch S"'
Search Results
2. Geodetic accuracy of the Macrometer model V-1000
- Author
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Bock, Y., Abbot, R. I., Counselman, C. C., Gourevitch, S. A., King, R. W., and Paradis, A. R.
- Published
- 1984
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
3. Wind Velocities on Venus: Vector Determination by Radio Interferometry
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Counselman, C. C., Gourevitch, S. A., King, R. W., Pettengill, G. H., Prinn, R. G., Shapiro, I. I., Miller, R. B., Smith, J. R., Ramos, R., and Liebrecht, P.
- Published
- 1979
4. P0294 : Oncogenesis: A potential “off-target” effect of radiofrequency ablation
- Author
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Rozenblum, N., primary, Zeira, E., additional, Scaiewicz, V., additional, Bulvik, B., additional, Gourevitch, S., additional, Galun, E., additional, and Goldberg, N.S., additional
- Published
- 2015
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
5. Centimeter-level relative positioning with GPS
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Counselman, C. C., III, Abbot, R. I, Gourevitch, S. A, King, R. W, and Paradis, A. R
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Earth Resources And Remote Sensing - Abstract
Although the Global Positioning System (GPS) was designed primarily for real-time navigation and positioning applications at the decameter level of accuracy, the GPS has been used to determine all three relative position coordinates of fixed points with centimeter-level accuracy, when the distance between the points has been of the order of 10 km. For intersite distances less than 1 km the uncertainty is about 3 mm, and for distances greater than 10 km the uncertainty in each coordinate is about 1-2 ppm of the distance. These results have been obtained with commercially available production equipment (Macrometer model V-1000 interferometric surveyors) operated by regular surveying personnel under real field conditions, not just by university scientists under ideal laboratory conditions. Techniques that promise to reduce the uncertainty to 0.1 ppm for distances greater than 10 km are being developed.
- Published
- 1983
6. Accuracy of relative positioning by interferometry with GPS Double-blind test results
- Author
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Counselman, C. C., III, Gourevitch, S. A, Herring, T. A, King, B. W, Shapiro, I. I, Cappallo, R. J, Rogers, A. E. E, Whitney, A. R, Greenspan, R. L, and Snyder, R. E
- Subjects
Instrumentation And Photography - Abstract
MITES (Miniature Interferometer Terminals for Earth Surveying) observations conducted on December 17 and 29, 1980, are analyzed. It is noted that the time span of the observations used on each day was 78 minutes, during which five satellites were always above 20 deg elevation. The observations are analyzed to determine the intersite position vectors by means of the algorithm described by Couselman and Gourevitch (1981). The average of the MITES results from the two days is presented. The rms differences between the two determinations of the components of the three vectors, which were about 65, 92, and 124 m long, were 8 mm for the north, 3 mm for the east, and 6 mm for the vertical. It is concluded that, at least for short distances, relative positioning by interferometry with GPS can be done reliably with subcentimeter accuracy.
- Published
- 1983
7. Zonal and meridional circulation of the lower atmosphere of Venus determined by radio interferometry
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Counselman, C. C., III, Gourevitch, S. A, King, R. W, Loriot, G. B, and Ginsberg, E. S
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Lunar And Planetary Exploration - Abstract
The results of the Pioneer Venus differential long-baseline interferometry experiment are presented. The velocity component of the Pioneer probes as they fell to the surface of Venus was calculated from the Doppler shift of the received signal, and the other two orthogonal components were determined by long-baseline interferometry. The ambient wind velocity was about 1 m/s or less near the surface of the planet and about 100 m/s at an altitude of about 65 km at all four probe locations. Strata of high wind shear were found at altitudes of 15, 45, and 60 km. The wind velocity was always directed within a few degrees of due west except at a few km above the surface. The dominant motion of the lower atmosphere seems to be a retrograde zonal rotation, and eddies appear to account for most of the instantaneous meridional velocity. The data suggest that, within the clouds, a thermally driven mean meridional circulation is superimposed upon the much more rapid zonal rotation.
- Published
- 1980
8. Geodesy by radio interferometry - Determination of a 1.24-km base line vector with approximately 5-mm repeatability
- Author
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Rogers, A. E. E, Knight, C. A, Hinteregger, H. F, Whitney, A. R, Counselman, C. C., III, Shapiro, I. I, Gourevitch, S. A, and Clark, T. A
- Subjects
Earth Resources And Remote Sensing - Abstract
The paper describes a new method for determining the base line vector from X band radio interferometric observations of extragalactic sources. The procedure utilizes the precision inherent in fringe phase measurements. Eleven separate experiments were conducted to measure the 1.24-km base line vector between the two antennas of the Haystack Observatory in Westford, Mass. The repeatability, scatter, and level of accuracy are discussed.
- Published
- 1978
9. Geodesy by radio interferometry: Determination of a 1.24-km base line vector with ∼5-mm repeatability.
- Author
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Rogers, A. E. E., Knight, C. A., Hinteregger, H. F., Whitney, A. R., Counselman, C. C., Shapiro, I. I., Gourevitch, S. A., and Clark, T. A.
- Published
- 1978
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
10. Three-Dimensional Geodetic Control by Interferometry with GPS (Global Positioning System): Processing of GPS Phase Observables.
- Author
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MASSACHUSETTS INST OF TECH CAMBRIDGE DEPT OF EARTH ATMOSPHERIC AND PLANETARY SCIENCES, Bock,Y, Abbot,R I, Counselman,C C , III, King,R W, Gourevitch,S A, MASSACHUSETTS INST OF TECH CAMBRIDGE DEPT OF EARTH ATMOSPHERIC AND PLANETARY SCIENCES, Bock,Y, Abbot,R I, Counselman,C C , III, King,R W, and Gourevitch,S A
- Abstract
Interferometry with the NAVSTAR Global Positioning System (GPS) is the most efficient method of establishing three-dimensional geodetic control on local and regional scales. This is already true, even though the constellation of satellites is incomplete. We consider some theoretical and practical aspects of using differenced carrier-phase observations of the GPS satellites to establish three-dimensional control networks. We present simple and efficient algorithms for processing multi-station, multi-satellite observations. These algorithms have been used to establish three-dimensional control networks. Under widely varying conditions, we have obtained accuracies of 1 to 1.5 parts per million (ppm) in all three coordinates, or by 1 to 3 cm for the coordinates differences between network stations separated 10 to 20 km. when interferometry is used also to determine the satellite orbits, we anticipate improvement of the accuracy of regional control networks to the level of 0.1 ppm. Keywords: Geodesy; Geodetic control; Geodetic networks; Three dimensional geodesy; Satellite geodesy; NAVSTAR Global Positioning System; and Interferometry., Presented at International Symposium on Precise Positioning with the Global Positioning System (1st), Rockville, MD 15-19 Apr 85.
- Published
- 1985
11. Interferometric Determination of GPS (Global Positioning System) Satellite Orbits.
- Author
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MASSACHUSETTS INST OF TECH CAMBRIDGE DEPT OF EARTH ATMOSPHERIC AND PLANETARY SCIENCES, Abbot,R I, Bock,Y, Counselman,C C , III, King,R W, Gourevitch,S A, MASSACHUSETTS INST OF TECH CAMBRIDGE DEPT OF EARTH ATMOSPHERIC AND PLANETARY SCIENCES, Abbot,R I, Bock,Y, Counselman,C C , III, King,R W, and Gourevitch,S A
- Abstract
One way phase observations of GPS satellites at three ground stations were differenced between stations to form interferometric observations. These single difference observations were differenced between satellites to form double difference observations. We analyzed the one way, single, and double difference observations by least-squares to determine the orbits of satellites. In most cases the formal standard errors of the estimated satellite positions were of the order of several meters---equivalent to a few parts in 10 million of the orbit radius. The actual errors of the estimated orbits are unknown, but we were able to test the day to day precisions by using these orbits to analyze observations from an independent pair of stations, to determine the baseline vector between them. The results of this analysis confirmed the uncertainty estimate of a few parts in 10 million. Further confirmation was obtained from a comparison of orbits estimated from disjoint, but interleaved, spans of observations. Keywords: Geodesy, Geodetic control; Geodetic networks; Three dimensional geodesy; Satellite geodesy, NAVSTAR Global Positioning System; Interferometry; Satellite orbits; Satellite orbit determination.
- Published
- 1985
12. GPS (Global Positioning System) Orbit Determination: Bootstrapping to Resolve Carrier Phase Ambiguity
- Author
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MASSACHUSETTS INST OF TECH CAMBRIDGE, Abbot, R. E., Counselman, III., C. C., Gourevitch, S. A., Ladd, J. W., MASSACHUSETTS INST OF TECH CAMBRIDGE, Abbot, R. E., Counselman, III., C. C., Gourevitch, S. A., and Ladd, J. W.
- Abstract
For Global Positioning System (GPS) satellite orbit determination, the most accurate observable available is carrier phase, differenced between observing stations and between satellites to cancel both transmitter and receiver related errors. For maximum accuracy, the integer cycle ambiguities of such observations must be resolved. To perform this ambiguity resolution, a bootstrapping strategy is effective. This strategy requires the tracking stations to have a wide ranging progression of spacings. Then, by conventional integrated Doppler processing of the observations from the most widely spaced stations, the orbits can be determined well enough to permit resolution can reduce the uncertainty of the orbit determination enough to enable ambiguity resolution for more widely spaced stations, which will reduce the orbital uncertainty further, and enable ambiguity resolution for still more widely spaced stations, and so on. This strategy is tested with two different tracking networks. This limited ambiguity resolution reduced both the formal and the actual errors of GPS orbit determinations by a factor of two. In the second twelve stations were arranged in a spiral with geometrically increasing spacings from 10 to 330 km. By bootstrapping, all ambiguities for baselines up to about 100 km long were resolved. The distance was limited by strong ionospheric variability. Still, orbit-determination uncertainty (3 sigma) was reduced to about 1:1,000,000. Improved handling of ionospheric effects in ambiguity resolution and the use of observations spanning more than one day should further reduce the uncertainty.
- Published
- 1989
13. Search forΞ*resonances in 2.87-GeV /cK−ninteractions
- Author
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Briefel, E., primary, Gourevitch, S. A., additional, Kirsch, L., additional, Schmidt, P., additional, Chang, C. Y., additional, Staab, R., additional, Yodh, G. B., additional, Fernow, R., additional, Gauthier, P., additional, Moneti, G., additional, Goldberg, M., additional, Canter, J., additional, Mann, W. A., additional, Schneps, J., additional, Tompkins, J., additional, and Wolsky, G., additional
- Published
- 1975
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14. Resonance production inK−n→Σ−π+π−(π0)reactions at 2.87 GeV/c
- Author
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Katsoufis, E., primary, Canter, J., additional, Mann, W. A., additional, Schneps, J., additional, Tompkins, J., additional, Wolsky, G., additional, Gourevitch, S. A., additional, Kirsch, L., additional, and Schmidt, P., additional
- Published
- 1978
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15. Search forΞ*production inK−pinteractions at 2.87 GeV/c
- Author
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Briefel, E., primary, Gourevitch, S. A., additional, Kirsch, L., additional, Schmidt, P., additional, Chang, C. Y., additional, Hemingway, R. J., additional, Khoury, B. V., additional, Stottlemyer, A. R., additional, Yodh, G. B., additional, Fernow, R. C., additional, Glickman, S. L., additional, Goldberg, M., additional, Jacobs, S. M., additional, Meadows, B. T., additional, Moneti, G. C., additional, Weygand, D. P., additional, Tompkins, J., additional, Canter, J., additional, Katsoufis, E., additional, Mann, W. A., additional, Schneps, J., additional, and Wolsky, G., additional
- Published
- 1977
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16. Production and decay ofΣ(1660)
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Apsell, S. P., primary, Ford, P., additional, Gourevitch, S., additional, Kirsch, L. E., additional, Schmidt, P. E., additional, Chang, C. Y., additional, Stottlemyer, A. R., additional, Yodh, G. B., additional, Glickman, S., additional, Goldberg, M., additional, Jacobs, S. M., additional, Meadows, B., additional, Moneti, G. C., additional, Brenner, J., additional, Schneps, J., additional, and Wolsky, G., additional
- Published
- 1974
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17. Radiofrequency ablation (RFA)-induced systemic tumor growth can be reduced by suppression of resultant heat shock proteins.
- Author
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Ahmed M, Kumar G, Gourevitch S, Levchenko T, Galun E, Torchilin V, and Goldberg SN
- Subjects
- Animals, Disease Models, Animal, Female, Heat-Shock Proteins pharmacology, Mammary Neoplasms, Experimental pathology, Radiofrequency Ablation methods, Rats, Heat-Shock Proteins therapeutic use, Mammary Neoplasms, Experimental chemically induced, Radiofrequency Ablation adverse effects
- Abstract
Purpose: To determine the role of hepatic radiofrequency ablation (RFA) heating parameters and their activation of heat shock proteins (HSPs) in modulating distant tumor growth., Methods and Materials: First, to study the effects of RFA dose on distant tumor growth, rats with subcutaneous R3230 adenocarcinoma (10 ± 1 mm) were assigned to 3 different hepatic RF doses (60 °C × 10 min, 70 °C × 5 min or 90 °C × 2 min) that induced identical sized ablation or sham (n = 6/arm). Post-RFA tumor growth rates, cellular proliferation (Ki-67) and microvascular density (MVD) were compared at 7d. Next, the effect of low and high power doses on local HSP70 expression and cellular infiltration (α-SMA + myofibroblasts and CD68 + macrophages), cytokine (IL-6) and growth factor (HGF and VEGF) expression was assessed. Finally, 60 °C × 10 min and 90 °C × 2 min RFA were combined with anti-HSP micellar quercetin (MicQ, 2 mg/ml). A total of 150 animals were used., Results: Lower RF heating (70 °C × 5 min and 60 °C × 10 min) resulted in larger distant tumors at 7d (19.2 ± 0.8 mm for both) while higher RF heating (90 °C × 2) led to less distant tumor growth (16.7 ± 1.5 mm, p < .01 for both), though increased over sham (13.5 ± 0.5 mm, p < .01). Ki-67 and MVD correlated with tumor growth (p < .01 for all). Additionally, lower dose 60 °C × 10 min hepatic RFA had more periablational HSP70 compared to 90 °C × 2 min (rim: 1.106 ± 163 µm vs. 360 ± 18 µm, p < .001), with similar trends for periablational α-SMA, CD68 and CDC47 (p < .01 for all). Anti-HSP70 MicQ blocked distant tumor growth for lower dose (60 °C × 10: RF/MicQ 14.6 ± 0.4 mm vs. RF alone: 18.1 ± 0.4 mm, p < .01) and higher dose RFA (90 °C × 2 min: RF/MicQ 14.6 ± 0.5 mm vs. RF alone: 16.4 ± 0.7 mm, p < .01)., Conclusion: Hepatic RF heating parameters alter periablational HSP70, which can influence and stimulate distant tumor growth. Modulation of RF heating parameters alone or in combination with adjuvant HSP inhibition can reduce unwanted, off-target systemic tumorigenic effects.
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- 2018
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18. Targeting STAT3 to Suppress Systemic Pro-Oncogenic Effects from Hepatic Radiofrequency Ablation.
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Kumar G, Goldberg SN, Gourevitch S, Levchenko T, Torchilin V, Galun E, and Ahmed M
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- Adenocarcinoma secondary, Aminosalicylic Acids pharmacology, Animals, Benzenesulfonates pharmacology, Carcinogenesis drug effects, Cell Transformation, Neoplastic, Chemotherapy, Adjuvant, Disease Models, Animal, Down-Regulation physiology, Female, Gene Expression physiology, Mammary Neoplasms, Experimental, Mice, Inbred C57BL, Microvessels physiology, Neoplasm Metastasis, Neoplasm Transplantation, Oncogene Proteins metabolism, Phosphorylation physiology, Rats, Inbred F344, STAT3 Transcription Factor genetics, Skin Neoplasms blood supply, Skin Neoplasms surgery, Up-Regulation physiology, Adenocarcinoma surgery, Catheter Ablation, Liver Neoplasms, Experimental surgery, STAT3 Transcription Factor antagonists & inhibitors
- Abstract
Purpose To (a) identify key expressed genes in the periablational rim after radiofrequency ablation (RFA) and their role in driving the stimulation of distant tumor growth and (b) use adjuvant drug therapies to block key identified mediator(s) to suppress off-target tumorigenic effects of hepatic RFA. Materials and Methods This institutional animal care and use committee-approved study was performed in C57BL6 mice (n = 20) and F344 rats (n = 124). First, gene expression analysis was performed in mice after hepatic RFA or sham procedure; mice were sacrificed 24 hours to 7 days after treatment. Data were analyzed for differentially expressed genes (greater than twofold change) and their functional annotations. Next, animals were allocated to hepatic RFA or sham treatment with or without STAT3 (signal transducer and activator of transcription 3) inhibitor S3I-201 for periablational phosphorylated STAT3 immunohistochemistry analysis at 24 hours. Finally, animals with subcutaneous R3230 adenocarcinoma tumors were allocated to RFA or sham treatment with or without a STAT3 inhibitor (S3I-201 or micellar curcumin, eight arms). Outcomes included distant tumor growth, proliferation (Ki-67 percentage), and microvascular density. Results At 24 hours, 217 genes had altered expression (107 upregulated and 110 downregulated), decreasing to 55 genes (27 upregulated and 28 downregulated) and 18 genes (four upregulated, 14 downregulated) at 72 hours and 7 days, respectively. At 24 hours, STAT3 occurred in four of seven activated pathways associated with pro-oncogenic genes at network analysis. Immunohistochemistry analysis confirmed elevated periablational phosphorylated STAT3 24 hours after RFA, which was suppressed with S3I-201 (percentage of positive cells per field: 31.7% ± 3.4 vs 3.8% ± 1.7; P < .001). Combined RFA plus S3I-201 reduced systemic distant tumor growth at 7 days (end diameter: 11.8 mm ± 0.5 with RFA plus S3I-201, 19.8 mm ± 0.7 with RFA alone, and 15 mm ± 0.7 with sham procedure; P < .001). STAT3 inhibition with micellar curcumin also suppressed postablation stimulation of distant tumor growth, proliferation, and microvascular density (P < .01). Conclusion Gene expression analysis identified multiple pathways upregulated in the periablational rim after hepatic RFA, of which STAT3 was active in four of seven. Postablation STAT3 activation is linked to increased distant tumor stimulation and can be suppressed with adjuvant STAT3 inhibitors.
© RSNA, 2017.- Published
- 2018
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19. Hepatic radiofrequency ablation: markedly reduced systemic effects by modulating periablational inflammation via cyclooxygenase-2 inhibition.
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Kumar G, Goldberg SN, Wang Y, Velez E, Gourevitch S, Galun E, and Ahmed M
- Subjects
- Animals, Cell Proliferation drug effects, Disease Models, Animal, Male, Mice, Mice, Inbred C57BL, Rats, Rats, Inbred F344, Catheter Ablation methods, Celecoxib pharmacology, Cyclooxygenase 2 Inhibitors pharmacology, Inflammation prevention & control, Liver surgery
- Abstract
Objectives: To determine whether celecoxib, a cyclooxygenase-2 (COX-2) inhibitor, can potentiate hepatic radiofrequency ablation (RFA)-induced local cellular infiltration and distant tumour growth., Methods: First, COX-2 expression was evaluated using immunohistochemistry in the local periablational rim 24 h after hepatic RFA without/with intraperitoneal celecoxib in normal Fisher 344 rat liver. Next, local cellular infiltration of macrophages, stellate cells, and hepatocyte proliferation were quantified in C57BL6 mice 3-7d after RFA without/with celecoxib. c-Met, HGF, and VEGF levels after RFA were also measured. Finally, distant tumour growth and proliferation (Ki67 and CD34) were observed in subcutaneous R3230 tumours after hepatic RFA with/without celecoxib., Results: Hepatic RFA-induced local activation of COX-2 was significantly suppressed using celecoxib. Celecoxib also reduced RFA-associated a) increased c-Met expression at 24 h, b) HGF and VEGF levels at 72 h, c) periablational macrophage and stellate cells at 3d, and d) hepatocyte proliferation at 7d. Similarly, celecoxib with RFA reduced distant tumour growth, tumour cell proliferation, and tumour microvascular density to sham levels, compared to increases observed with hepatic RFA alone., Conclusions: Increased activation of COX-2 after hepatic RFA contributes to periablational cellular infiltration and inflammation-mediated distant tumour growth, which can be successfully suppressed with a COX-2 inhibitor., Key Points: • Thermal ablation of liver tissue can increase local inflammation and COX-2 expression. • Ablation-induced local inflammation can contribute to stimulation of distant tumour growth. • Local COX-2 inhibition with celecoxib can block ablation-induced distant tumour growth.
- Published
- 2017
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20. Hepatic Thermal Ablation: Effect of Device and Heating Parameters on Local Tissue Reactions and Distant Tumor Growth.
- Author
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Velez E, Goldberg SN, Kumar G, Wang Y, Gourevitch S, Sosna J, Moon T, Brace CL, and Ahmed M
- Subjects
- Adenocarcinoma pathology, Animals, Catheter Ablation methods, Disease Models, Animal, Female, Hepatocyte Growth Factor metabolism, Hyperthermia, Induced adverse effects, Interleukin-6 metabolism, Ki-67 Antigen metabolism, Macrophages pathology, Mammary Neoplasms, Experimental pathology, Neoplasm Metastasis, Neoplasm Transplantation, Neoplasms, Connective Tissue pathology, Random Allocation, Rats, Inbred F344, Tumor Burden physiology, Vascular Endothelial Growth Factor A metabolism, Catheter Ablation adverse effects, Inflammation etiology, Liver surgery, Microwaves adverse effects, Neoplasm Seeding
- Abstract
Purpose To determine whether variable hepatic microwave ablation (MWA) can induce local inflammation and distant pro-oncogenic effects compared with hepatic radiofrequency ablation (RFA) in an animal model. Materials and Methods In this institutional Animal Care and Use Committee-approved study, F344 rats (150 gm, n = 96) with subcutaneous R3230 breast adenocarcinoma tumors had normal non-tumor-bearing liver treated with RFA (70°C × 5 minutes), rapid higher-power MWA (20 W × 15 seconds), slower lower-power MWA (5 W × 2 minutes), or a sham procedure (needle placement without energy) and were sacrificed at 6 hours to 7 days (four time points; six animals per arm per time point). Ablation settings produced 11.4 mm ± 0.8 of coagulation for all groups. Distant tumor growth rates were determined to 7 days after treatment. Liver heat shock protein (HSP) 70 levels (at 72 hours) and macrophages (CD68 at 7 days), tumor proliferative indexes (Ki-67 and CD34 at 7 days), and serum and tissue levels of interleukin 6 (IL-6) at 6 hours, hepatocyte growth factor (HGF) at 72 hours, and vascular endothelial growth factor (VEGF) at 72 hours after ablation were assessed. All data were expressed as means ± standard deviations and were compared by using two-tailed t tests and analysis of variance for selected group comparisons. Linear regression analysis of tumor growth curves was used to determine pre- and posttreatment growth curves on a per-tumor basis. Results At 7 days, hepatic ablations with 5-W MWA and RFA increased distant tumor size compared with 20-W MWA and the sham procedure (5-W MWA: 16.3 mm ± 1.1 and RFA: 16.3 mm ± 0.9 vs sham: 13.6 mm ± 1.3, P < .01, and 20-W MWA: 14.6 mm ± 0.9, P < .05). RFA and 5-W MWA increased postablation tumor growth rates compared with the 20-W MWA and sham arms (preablation growth rates range for all arms: 0.60-0.64 mm/d; postablation: RFA: 0.91 mm/d ± 0.11, 5-W MWA: 0.91 mm/d ± 0.14, P < .01 vs pretreatment; 20-W MWA: 0.69 mm/d ± 0.07, sham: 0.56 mm/d ± 1.15; P = .48 and .65, respectively). Tumor proliferation (Ki-67 percentage) was increased for 5-W MWA (82% ± 5) and RFA (79% ± 5), followed by 20-W MWA (65% ± 2), compared with sham (49% ± 5, P < .01). Likewise, distant tumor microvascular density was greater for 5-W MWA and RFA (P < .01 vs 20-W MWA and sham). Lower-energy MWA and RFA also resulted in increased HSP 70 expression and macrophages in the periablational rim (P < .05). Last, IL-6, HGF, and VEGF elevations were seen in 5-W MWA and RFA compared with 20-W MWA and sham (P < .05). Conclusion Although hepatic MWA can incite periablational inflammation and increased distant tumor growth similar to RFA in an animal tumor model, higher-power, faster heating protocols may potentially mitigate such undesired effects.
© RSNA, 2016.- Published
- 2016
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21. Radiofrequency Ablation: Inflammatory Changes in the Periablative Zone Can Induce Global Organ Effects, including Liver Regeneration.
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Rozenblum N, Zeira E, Bulvik B, Gourevitch S, Yotvat H, Galun E, and Goldberg SN
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- Animals, Inflammation etiology, Mice, Mice, Inbred C57BL, Necrosis etiology, Ablation Techniques adverse effects, Electrosurgery adverse effects, Liver pathology, Liver surgery, Liver Regeneration
- Abstract
Purpose: To determine the kinetics of innate immune and hepatic response to the coagulation necrosis area that remains in situ after radiofrequency (RF) ablation, the cytokine profile of this response, and its local and global effect on the whole organ in a small-animal model., Materials and Methods: A standardized RF ablation dose (70°C for 5 minutes) was used to ablate more than 7% of the liver in 91 C57BL6 mice (wild type) according to a protocol approved by the animal care committee. The dynamic cellular response in the border zone surrounding ablation-induced coagulation and in the ablated lobe and an untreated lobe were characterized with immunohistochemistry 24 hours, 72 hours, 7 days, and 14 days after ablation (the time points at which cells migrate to necrotic tissues). After characterization of the cellular populations that reacted to the RF treatment, cytokines secreted by these cells were blocked, either by using interleukin-6 knockout mice (n = 24) or c-met inhibitor PHA 665752 (n = 15), to elucidate the key factors facilitating the wound healing response to RF ablation. Statistical significance was assessed with nonparametric analysis of variance., Results: RF ablation induces a strong time-dependent immunologic response at the perimeter of the necrotic zone. This includes massive accumulation of neutrophils, activated myofibroblasts, and macrophages peaking at 24 hours, 7 days, and 14 days after ablation, respectively. In correlation with myofibroblast accumulation, RF ablation induced hepatocyte proliferation in both the ablated lobe and an untreated lobe (mean, 165.15 and 230.4 cyclin-dependent kinase 47-positive cells per ×20 field, respectively, at day 7; P < .02). Blockade of either IL-6 or c-met significantly reduced global hepatocyte proliferation (P < .05 for both), with the former reducing the accumulation of both macrophages and myofibroblasts surrounding the coagulation necrosis area (42.9 and 113.6 vs 7.3 and 46.6 macrophages and activated myofibroblasts per ×20 field, respectively; P < .036 for both)., Conclusion: Hepatic RF ablation induces not only a local periablational inflammatory zone but also more global proliferative effects on the liver. These IL-6- and/or c-met-mediated changes could potentially account for some of the local and distant tumor recurrence observed after treatment., (© RSNA, 2015 Online supplemental material is available for this article.)
- Published
- 2015
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22. Oncogenesis: An "Off-Target" Effect of Radiofrequency Ablation.
- Author
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Rozenblum N, Zeira E, Scaiewicz V, Bulvik B, Gourevitch S, Yotvat H, Galun E, and Goldberg SN
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- Animals, Mice, Neoplasm Recurrence, Local prevention & control, Ablation Techniques adverse effects, Carcinogenesis, Carcinoma, Hepatocellular etiology, Carcinoma, Hepatocellular surgery, Electrosurgery adverse effects, Hepatectomy methods, Liver Neoplasms etiology, Liver Neoplasms surgery
- Abstract
Purpose: To compare hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC) development after radiofrequency (RF) ablation, partial surgical hepatectomy, and a sham operation and to inhibit HCC recurrence after RF ablation in a mouse model of spontaneously forming HCC in the setting of chronic inflammation (ie, the MDR2 knockout model)., Materials and Methods: Animal experiments were performed according to an approved animal care committee protocol. The authors compared the survival of MDR2 knockout mice (an inflammation-induced HCC model) that underwent RF ablation, 35% partial hepatectomy (ie, left lobectomy), or a sham operation (controls) by using Kaplan-Meier survival curve analysis. Tumor load and tumor frequency in mice that underwent sham operation were further compared with those of mice treated with RF ablation at 1 month after therapy by using a two-tailed Student t test. Liver slices from mice treated with RF ablation were stained for α-smooth muscle actin and Ki-67 to establish the role of liver regeneration in the tumorigenic effect of RF ablation. Finally, tumor load and tumor incidence were evaluated in mice treated with a c-met inhibitor after RF ablation by using the Mann-Whitney U test., Results: Ablation of 3.5% ± 0.02 of the MDR2 knockout mice liver induced increased tumor load (P = .007) and reduced survival (P = .03) in comparison to that of controls, with no significant difference to the 10-fold volume removal of partial hepatectomy. Seven days after RF treatment, the border zone of the coagulation zone was surrounded by α-smooth muscle actin-positive activated myofibroblasts. A significant elevation of hepatocyte proliferation was also seen 7 days after RF ablation in the distant liver (ablated lobe: P = .003; untreated lobe: P = .02). A c-met inhibitor significantly attenuated HCC development in MDR2 knockout mice treated with RF ablation (P = .001)., Conclusion: Liver regeneration induced by RF ablation facilitates c-met/hepatocyte growth factor axis-dependent HCC tumor formation after treatment in the MDR2 knockout model. Blockage of the c-met/hepatocyte growth factor axis attenuates HCC recurrence, raising the potential for therapeutic intervention to reverse this potentially deleterious tumorigenic effect., (© RSNA, 2015.)
- Published
- 2015
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23. Systemic siRNA Nanoparticle-Based Drugs Combined with Radiofrequency Ablation for Cancer Therapy.
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Ahmed M, Kumar G, Navarro G, Wang Y, Gourevitch S, Moussa MH, Rozenblum N, Levchenko T, Galun E, Torchilin VP, and Goldberg SN
- Subjects
- Animals, Antineoplastic Agents pharmacology, Cell Proliferation drug effects, Combined Modality Therapy, Disease Models, Animal, Female, Hepatocytes drug effects, Hepatocytes pathology, Interleukin-6 metabolism, Kidney drug effects, Kidney pathology, Liver drug effects, Liver pathology, Liver surgery, Mammary Neoplasms, Experimental blood supply, Mice, Inbred C57BL, Micelles, Neovascularization, Pathologic metabolism, Neovascularization, Pathologic pathology, Rats, Inbred F344, Subcutaneous Tissue pathology, Vascular Endothelial Growth Factor A metabolism, Antineoplastic Agents therapeutic use, Catheter Ablation, Mammary Neoplasms, Experimental drug therapy, Mammary Neoplasms, Experimental surgery, Nanoparticles chemistry, RNA, Small Interfering metabolism
- Abstract
Purpose: Radiofrequency thermal ablation (RFA) of hepatic and renal tumors can be accompanied by non-desired tumorigenesis in residual, untreated tumor. Here, we studied the use of micelle-encapsulated siRNA to suppress IL-6-mediated local and systemic secondary effects of RFA., Methods: We compared standardized hepatic or renal RFA (laparotomy, 1 cm active tip at 70 ± 2 °C for 5 min) and sham procedures without and with administration of 150 nm micelle-like nanoparticle (MNP) anti-IL6 siRNA (DOPE-PEI conjugates, single IP dose 15 min post-RFA, C57Bl mouse:3.5 ug/100ml, Fisher 344 rat: 20 ug/200 ul), RFA/scrambled siRNA, and RFA/empty MNPs. Outcome measures included: local periablational cellular infiltration (α-SMA+ stellate cells), regional hepatocyte proliferation, serum/tissue IL-6 and VEGF levels at 6-72 hr, and distant tumor growth, tumor proliferation (Ki-67) and microvascular density (MVD, CD34) in subcutaneous R3230 and MATBIII breast adenocarcinoma models at 7 days., Results: For liver RFA, adjuvant MNP anti-IL6 siRNA reduced RFA-induced increases in tissue IL-6 levels, α-SMA+ stellate cell infiltration, and regional hepatocyte proliferation to baseline (p < 0.04, all comparisons). Moreover, adjuvant MNP anti-IL6- siRNA suppressed increased distant tumor growth and Ki-67 observed in R3230 and MATBIII tumors post hepatic RFA (p<0.01). Anti-IL6 siRNA also reduced RFA-induced elevation in VEGF and tumor MVD (p < 0.01). Likewise, renal RFA-induced increases in serum IL-6 levels and distant R3230 tumor growth was suppressed with anti-IL6 siRNA (p < 0.01)., Conclusions: Adjuvant nanoparticle-encapsulated siRNA against IL-6 can be used to modulate local and regional effects of hepatic RFA to block potential unwanted pro-oncogenic effects of hepatic or renal RFA on distant tumor.
- Published
- 2015
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
24. On the distinction between narcissism and will: two aspects of the self.
- Author
-
Kainer RG and Gourevitch S
- Subjects
- Creativity, Humans, Object Attachment, Personality Development, Ego, Narcissism, Psychoanalytic Theory
- Published
- 1983
25. Cognition without awareness: subliminal influences upon conscious thought.
- Author
-
KLEIN GS, SPENCE DP, HOLT RR, and GOUREVITCH S
- Subjects
- Humans, Awareness, Cognition, Consciousness, Thinking
- Published
- 1958
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
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