Glioblastoma is increasingly treated with Tumor Treating Fields (TTFields), but how post-craniotomy anatomy and fixation hardware alter delivered fields is unclear. We used finite-element modeling in a realistic head model to simulate TTFields after a standard bone flap with either a non-penetrating fixation plate or a penetrating skull clamp, and compared results to an intact- skull baseline across a range of clinically used array layouts. Bone gaps increased mean brain electric-field magnitude by ~10-20%. Non- penetrating plates caused only minimal, localized changes relative to the bone-gap condition. In contrast, penetrating clamps produced strong but spatially confined increases: local mean fields were ~6-8x higher within 5-10 mm of the device, with [≥] 50% enhancement extending ~50-60 mm depending on whether the gap was modeled as healed scalp (soft-tissue-like) or healed bone; this enhancement decayed with distance. These simulations, performed in a single head model with literature-based tissue conductivities, suggest that penetrating hardware can substantially modulate local TTFields delivery, whereas non – penetrating plates have minimal impact. Accounting for post – surgical anatomy and hardware in TTFields planning may improve dose targeting.
Mucin-type O-glycans regulate proteoglycan stability and chondrocyte maturation
O-glycosylation is a ubiquitous post-translational modification essential for protein stability, cell signaling, and tissue organization, yet how distinct O-glycan subclasses coordinate tissue development remains unclear.




