Abstract

The present study describes and documents self-assembly of geometric triangular chiral hexagon crystal like complex organizations (GTCHC) in human pathological tissues.The authors have found this architectural geometric expression at macroscopic and microscopic levels mainly in cancer processes. This study is based essentially on macroscopic and histopathologic analyses of 3000 surgical specimens: 2600 inflammatory lesions and 400 malignant tumours. Geometric complexes identified photographically at macroscopic level were located in the gross surgical specimen, and these areas were carefully dissected. Samples were taken to carry out histologic analysis. Based on the hypothesis of a collision genesis mechanism and because it is difficult to carry out an appropriate methodological observation in biological systems, the authors designed a model base on other dynamic systems to obtain indirect information in which a strong white flash wave light discharge, generated by an electronic device, hits over the lines of electrical conductance structured in helicoidal pattern. In their experimental model, the authors were able to reproduce and to predict polarity, chirality, helicoid geometry, triangular and hexagonal clusters through electromagnetic sequential collisions. They determined that similar events among constituents of extracelular matrix which drive and produce piezoelectric activity are responsible for the genesis of GTCHC complexes in pathological tissues. This research suggests that molecular crystals represented by triangular chiral hexagons derived from a collision-attraction event against collagen type I fibrils emerge at microscopic and macroscopic scales presenting a lateral assembly of each side of hypertrophy helicoid fibers, that represent energy flow in cooperative hierarchically chiral electromagnetic interaction in pathological tissues and arises as a geometry of the equilibrium in perturbed biological systems. Further interdisciplinary studies must be carried out to reproduce, manipulate and amplify their activity and probably use them as a base to develop new therapeutic strategies in cancer.

Highlights

  • The present study describes and documents self-assembly of geometric triangular chiral hexagon crystal like complexes organizations (GTCHC) in human pathological tissues

  • Geometric triangular tissue morphological patterns have been documented at different levels: At microscopic level: Triangular morphology of neoplastic cells in vitro was seen in rat cell sarcoma culture lines in relation with malignancy. [1]

  • Pathological tissues are an excellent means of analyzing chaos states and molecular disorder, and identifying order expression through geometry and mirror images in the core of this biological environment, it is a unique fact, and it is to be located in the chaos–order interface

Read more

Summary

Introduction

The present study describes and documents self-assembly of geometric triangular chiral hexagon crystal like complexes organizations (GTCHC) in human pathological tissues This architectural geometric expression has been found at macroscopic and microscopic levels mainly in cancer processes. A methodological analysis of 3000 images has allowed the authors to discover that the complexes are not uncommon or random findings on the contrary they appear as self –assembled structures that fit cohesively inside a morphological pattern, which assembles in space-time intervals, and the authors believe they have a biological meaning By analyzing these complexes, repetitive morphological patterns that are inherent objectively to the configuration of each formation, and that belong to the field of physics are identified.

Methods
Results
Conclusion
Full Text
Paper version not known

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call

Disclaimer: All third-party content on this website/platform is and will remain the property of their respective owners and is provided on "as is" basis without any warranties, express or implied. Use of third-party content does not indicate any affiliation, sponsorship with or endorsement by them. Any references to third-party content is to identify the corresponding services and shall be considered fair use under The CopyrightLaw.