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Hipec

Manufactured by Dow
Sourced in United States

HIPEC is a medical device designed for the delivery of heated, pressurized chemotherapy to the abdominal cavity during surgery. The system heats and circulates the chemotherapy solution within the abdomen, providing direct contact with the target tissues.

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2 protocols using hipec

1

Sodium Current Recordings Using Patch Clamp

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Na+ currents were recorded using low-resistance, fire-polished patch clamp electrodes (≈ 1–1.5 MΩ) made from 8161 Corning borosilicate glass coated with HIPEC (Dow-Corning, Midland, MI, USA) to minimize electrode capacitance. An Axopatch 200 amplifier and pClamp software (Molecular Devices, Sunnyvale, CA, USA) were used to record Na+ currents. The series resistance was compensated to 80% to minimize voltage-clamp errors. The cells were allowed to stabilize for 5 min after the whole-cell configuration was established. The membrane potential was held at − 140 mV before the currents were recorded. Sodium currents were filtered at 5 kHz and were digitized at 83.33 kHz. The liquid junction potential was not corrected. All the experiments were performed at room temperature (22 °C).
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2

Patch-Clamp Recordings of Sodium Currents

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Na+ currents were recorded using low-resistance, fire-polished electrodes (≈1 MΩ) made from 8161 Corning borosilicate glass coated with HIPEC (Dow-Corning, Midland, MI) to minimize electrode capacitance. An Axopatch 200 amplifier and pClamp software (Molecular Devices, Sunnyvale, CA) were used to record Na+ currents. The series resistance was compensated to 80% to minimize voltage-clamp errors. The cells were allowed to stabilize for 5 minutes after the whole-cell configuration was established. The membrane potential was held at –140 mV before the currents were recorded. Sodium currents were filtered at 5 kHz and digitized at 83.33 kHz. The liquid junction potential was not corrected. All the experiments were performed at room temperature (22 °C).
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