Experimental cryosurgery on bone: A light and electron microscopical investigation

1980 
Abstract Three rabbits were treated with cryosurgery on the lateral surface of the mandible. Osteocytes with normal appearance were not detected in the cortex after 2 or 7 days following cryosurgery. In the marrow cavity, cells appeared more resistant and often showed a normal morphology as studied with both light and electron microscopy. The reason why cells survived in the marrow cavity is probably due to a combination of sheltering bone and the near proximity to an intact circulation due to a patent alveolar artery. The uncertain extension of the cold front beyond the cortex may indicate that cryosurgery alone is not suitable if a tumor has invaded the marrow cavity, while more superficially located tumors can be eradicated. However, tumor invasion itself destroys the cortex and thus the marrow cavity will be more readily exposed to the more extensive cryosurgical techniques used in clinical cryosurgery.
    • Correction
    • Source
    • Cite
    • Save
    • Machine Reading By IdeaReader
    10
    References
    10
    Citations
    NaN
    KQI
    []