ELECTROCHEMOTHERAPY TUMOUR ELECTRIC SHOCK TREATMENT

BY KEITH NUTHALL CHEFS know that to get the best out of a steak - it needs to be whacked with a hammer to tenderise it, making it more likely to soak up marinades and more delicate to the palate. Detectives know that softening up suspects with a good-cop, bad-cop routine will make them more pliant to questioning The same applies to treating cancer tumours: if you knock them around a bit first, they are less able to resist drugs designed - ultimately - to wipe them out. It is the key principle behind the developing practice of electrochemotherapy. Here, tumours ...


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