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Issue title: Special Issue for the Fifth International Congress of Biorheology. Part II. Baden-Baden, F.R. Germany, 20–24 August 1983
Guest editors: Alfred L. Copley and Siegfried Witte
Article type: Research Article
Authors: Reinhold, H.S. | van den Berg-Blok, A.
Affiliations: ERASMUS University, Rotterdam; and Radiobiological Institute TNO, Rijswijk The Netherlands
Abstract: When experimental tumours are inoculated into a host animal, the tumour growth depends, among other things, on its vascular supply. This vascular supply has been shown to be initiated by substances released by the tumour tissue, and vascular sprouting towards implanted tumour substances has been extensively demonstrated in nonvascular tissue. Most tissues, however, already contain a vascular supply sufficient for their own needs. In such conditions, the host vascular system is probably incorporated into the tumour without much vascular sprouting. It is well known that, as a tumour grows larger, the center tends to become ischaemic and necrotic. It is not clear why the tumour vascularity does not respond to this development with reactive vascular proliferation, but increased interstitial tissue pressure and impaired fluid transport may be implicated.
Keywords: Neovascularization, microcirculation, experimental tumours, angiogenesis
DOI: 10.3233/BIR-1984-21408
Journal: Biorheology, vol. 21, no. 4, pp. 493-501, 1984
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