AI Article Synopsis

  • The study investigates the effects of blue light on cell growth in leukemia patients through extracorporeal circulation therapy.
  • While circulating HL60 leukemia cells exposed to blue light for 5 hours showed significant growth suppression,
  • experiments with rat blood had similar results; leukemic cells were inhibited after 3 hours of exposure, while normal lymphocytes remained unaffected.
  • This indicates that blue light may selectively target and suppress cancer cells more effectively than normal cells.

Article Abstract

To explore the possibility of using blue light for extracorporeal circulation therapy in patients with leukemia, the effects of blue light on cell growth in vitro and in extracorporeally circulated blood of rats with leukemia were evaluated. When HL60 cells circulated extracorporeally using a peristaltic pump were exposed to blue light for 5 h, the growth of the cells was found to be markedly suppressed. Then, the blood of rats with erythroblastic leukemia, induced by the administration of tap water containing l-ethyl-l-nitrosourea (ENU) for 9-16 weeks, was circulated extracorporeally and exposed to blue light for 3 h. Lymphocytes were separated from the peripheral blood immediately after the end of blue-light-exposure and incubated for 7 days. The growth of leukemic cells was found to be significantly suppressed following exposure to blue light, whereas the growth of normal lymphocytes was unaffected. These findings suggest that cancer cells may be more sensitive to blue light than normal cells.

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