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( Laboratory of Oncologic Surgery, Department of Surgery, Georgetown University Medical Center, Washington, D.C.)
Malignant tumors frequently exhibit characteristic patterns of metastatic spread. In the rabbit, the VX2 carcinoma metastasizes to the lung, whereas the Brown-Pearce carcinoma usually spreads to organs distal to this structure. A system of in vivo microscopy has been established in which the response of the microcirculation of the lung has been observed during embolization of tumor cells from these neoplasms. The VX2 tumor characteristically produces microcirculatory arrest or slowing, but the Brown-Pearce does not show this effect. Microcirculatory response to specific cancer cells may be one of the determinants of metastatic pattern.
* Supported by a Grant (C-5160) from the National Cancer Institute, National Institutes of Health, Bethesda, Maryland.
Received 5/ 3/62.
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