A microwave-hyperthermia model of febrile convulsions
โ Scribed by Dennis L. Hjeresen; A. W. Guy; F. M. Petracca; J. Diaz
- Publisher
- John Wiley and Sons
- Year
- 1983
- Tongue
- English
- Weight
- 927 KB
- Volume
- 4
- Category
- Article
- ISSN
- 0197-8462
No coin nor oath required. For personal study only.
โฆ Synopsis
While convulsions associated with fever represent a serious problem in pediatric medicine, conventional animal models of febrile convulsions suffer numerous technical limitations. A microwave-hyperthermia model that eliminates these problems was tested. Microwave energy was used to increase the core temperature of 13-and 17-day-old rats, resulting in convulsions similar to febrile convulsions in human infants. Rats were irradiated for 10 min in circularly polarized waveguides at 918 MHz, CW (average SAR = 9.4 W/kg at 13 days and 18.0 Wlkg at 17 days as determined by twin-well calorimetry). Day 17 irradiated rats were less susceptible to convulsions than were day 13 irradiated rats, indicating an age-dependent decline in susceptibility. Contrary to findings of earlier models using infrared or hot-oven heating, convulsions induced with microwave hyperthermia impaired neither brain growth nor subsequent performance during behavioral testing. Simultaneous measurement of brain and rectal temperatures during microwave irradiation revealed differential heating rates that favor thermal homeostasis in brain tissue.
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