Abstract

The aim of the present study was to estimate the feasibility of blood serum hydrogen bonds energy distribution, and information-theoretic characteristics, as diagnostic markers for tumor disease in Graffi tumor bearing hamsters. Golden Syrian hamsters were randomly divided into two groups: a healthy control and an experimental one, challenged with Graffi tumor cells. The distributions of hydrogen bonds energies (-E) in the blood serum samples were investigated with a nonequilibrium process of droplets evaporation and sequential measurements of their wetting angle (Non-equilibrium Energy Spectrum (NES)). The measurements show significantly lower average hydrogen bond energy of the experimental samples than the controls. Shifts in NES toward depletion of (-E) at energy levels 0.0937, 0.1187, 0.1212, 0.1337, and 0.1387 eV, and an additional population at 0.0987, 0.1012, 0.1137, and 0.1237 eV energy levels were observed in the experimental samples compared to the controls. Such a pattern points to the possibility of utilizing the f(E) shifts at these energy levels as diagnostic markers of Graffi tumor in hamsters. Information-theoretic measures of Shannon entropy, Variation of information and Transformational information entropy were used to investigate possible differences between the experimental and control spectrum. Although they differ significantly in definitions, a comparison with the three information-theoretic measures did not reveal a statistically significant difference.

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