Abstract

Water-suppressed proton nuclear magnetic resonance spectroscopy was used to observe plasma lipoprotein lipid methyl and methylene resonances from guinea pigs which had been injected with viable or heat-killed line 1 or line 10 tumor cells or sterile oil. It was shown that the widths of these resonances became significantly sharper as the number of tumor cells grew. Plasma from tumor-free control animals showed no change in the NMR linewidths. It is concluded that the changes observed reflect a specific host response to viable tumor cells, and in these models there is a reciprocal relationship between the number of viable tumor cells and the linewidths of plasma lipoprotein methyl and methylene resonances.

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