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| Electrical Pulses (Pulsed Electric Field therapies; PEF) are a bioelectromagnetic modality in oncology that delivers brief, high-voltage (or high-field) pulses to tissue to permeabilize membranes and/or ablate tumors. Clinically relevant categories commonly discussed: -Shorter, bipolar/high-frequency µs waveforms (H-FIRE) are repeatedly shown to reduce or eliminate muscle contractions versus classic monopolar IRE, improving tolerability and potentially reducing need for paralytics. -Nanosecond pulses with fast rise times can overcome membrane charging delays and directly polarize organelles, which is why rise-time engineering becomes a first-order variable for intracellular effects (mitochondria/ER, Ca²⁺, ROS, regulated death programs). -nsPEF / Nano-Pulse Stimulation (NPS) used as irreversible tumor ablation (intracellular emphasis). With ns pulses, fast rise times and short widths can drive intracellular membrane perturbation (not just plasma membrane), shifting biological response vs classic IRE.
In nsPEF systems the main engineering challenge is not current or power, but:
-generating fast rise times
-maintaining transmission line impedance
-preventing pulse distortion at the electrodes
Other important aspects of nsPEF
-mainly an electric field effect:
-Membrane breakdown typically occurs around 0.5–1 V across the membrane,
which corresponds to ~10–50 kV/cm fields in tissue.
-ns pulses terminate before plasma channels develop.
-impedance mismatch and cable dispersion is important
-nsPEF often induces programmed cell death rather than thermal ablation
The hallmark of nsPEF is simultaneous targeting of multiple intracellular pathways, particularly:
-Calcium signaling (Ca²⁺ release)
-Mitochondrial apoptosis (ΔΨm↓, Caspase-9↑, Caspase-3↑)
-ROS stress pathways
Research might show cancer cells have some greater sensitivity to nsPEF,
but nsPEF affects both normal and cancer cells
Electrical Pulses / PEF Oncology Modality — Ranked Mechanistic Axes
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| The electron transport chain (ETC) — the mitochondrial system that produces ATP through oxidative phosphorylation — is deeply linked to cancer biology, both in tumor promotion and suppression. -The ETC resides in the inner mitochondrial membrane and includes Complexes I–IV and ATP synthase (Complex V). -It transfers electrons from NADH/FADH₂ to oxygen, generating ATP and reactive oxygen species (ROS) as byproducts. -The function of the tricarboxylic acid (TCA) cycle and the mitochondrial electron transport chain (ETC) is to transfer electrons from carbon to oxygen and release energy in the form of ATP. The #1 theory of how pulsed Magnetic Fields affect the ETC is by the RPM
The ETC consists of:
-Complex I – NADH dehydrogenase
-Complex II – Succinate dehydrogenase
-➡ Complex III – Cytochrome bc₁ complex
-Complex IV – Cytochrome c oxidase
-ATP synthase (often called Complex V)
Complex III sits between Coenzyme Q (ubiquinol) and cytochrome c.
Complex III is a major regulated source of mitochondrial ROS, especially:
-Superoxide generation at the Qo site
-ROS used for redox signaling (HIF stabilization, signaling adaptation)
-Excess ROS contributes to DNA damage and cell death
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| 5529- | EP, | Effects of nsPEFs on Electron Transport and Mitochondrial Structures and Functions |
| - | Review, | Var, | NA |
| 5521- | EP, | Nanosecond Pulsed Electric Fields (nsPEFs) Modulate Electron Transport in the Plasma Membrane and the Mitochondria |
| - | in-vitro, | BC, | 4T1 | - | in-vitro, | Nor, | H9c2 |
Query results interpretion may depend on "conditions" listed in the research papers. Such Conditions may include : -low or high Dose -format for product, such as nano of lipid formations -different cell line effects -synergies with other products -if effect was for normal or cancerous cells
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