19 results on '"Diamond KR"'
Search Results
2. Accuracy of a simple diffusion model of fluorescence for estimating fluorophore concentration
- Author
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Diamond, Kr, Michael Patterson, and Farrell, Tj
3. Effect of thoracoabdominal aortic aneurysm extent on outcomes in patients undergoing fenestrated/branched endovascular aneurysm repair.
- Author
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Diamond KR, Simons JP, Crawford AS, Arous EJ, Judelson DR, Aiello F, Jones DW, Messina L, and Schanzer A
- Subjects
- Aged, Aged, 80 and over, Aortic Aneurysm, Thoracic diagnostic imaging, Aortic Aneurysm, Thoracic mortality, Blood Vessel Prosthesis, Endoleak etiology, Female, Graft Occlusion, Vascular etiology, Humans, Male, Middle Aged, Paraparesis etiology, Prosthesis Design, Registries, Retrospective Studies, Risk Assessment, Risk Factors, Stents, Time Factors, Treatment Outcome, Vascular Patency, Aortic Aneurysm, Thoracic surgery, Blood Vessel Prosthesis Implantation adverse effects, Blood Vessel Prosthesis Implantation instrumentation, Blood Vessel Prosthesis Implantation mortality, Endovascular Procedures adverse effects, Endovascular Procedures instrumentation, Endovascular Procedures mortality
- Abstract
Objective: The outcomes after open repair of thoracoabdominal aneurysms (TAAAs) have been definitively demonstrated to worsen as the TAAA extent increases. However, the effect of TAAA extent on fenestrated/branched endovascular aneurysm repair (F/BEVAR) outcomes is unclear. We investigated the differences in outcomes of F/BEVAR according to the TAAA extent., Methods: We reviewed a single-institution, prospectively maintained database of all F/BEVAR procedures performed in an institutional review board-approved registry and/or physician-sponsored Food and Drug Administration investigational device exemption trial (trial no. G130210). The patients were stratified into two groups: group 1, extensive (extent 1-3) TAAAs; and group 2, nonextensive (juxtarenal, pararenal, and extent 4-5) TAAAs. The perioperative outcomes were compared using the χ
2 test. Kaplan-Meier analysis of 3-year survival, target artery patency, reintervention, type I or III endoleak, and branch instability (type Ic or III endoleak, loss of branch patency, target vessel stenosis >50%) was performed. Cox proportional hazards modeling was used to assess the independent effect of extensive TAAA on 1-year mortality., Results: During the study period, 299 F/BEVAR procedures were performed for 87 extensive TAAAs (29%) and 212 nonextensive TAAAs (71%). Most repairs had used company-manufactured, custom-made devices (n = 241; 81%). Between the two groups, no perioperative differences were observed in myocardial infarction, stroke, acute kidney injury, dialysis, target artery occlusion, access site complication, or type I or III endoleak (P > .05 for all). The incidence of perioperative paraparesis was greater in the extensive TAAA group (8.1% vs 0.5%; P = .001). However, the incidence of long-term paralysis was equivalent (2.3% vs 0.5%; P = .20), with nearly all patients with paraparesis regaining ambulatory function. On Kaplan-Meier analysis, no differences in survival, target artery patency, or freedom from reintervention were observed at 3 years (P > .05 for all). Freedom from type I or III endoleak (P < .01) and freedom from branch instability (P < .01) were significantly worse in the extensive TAAA group. Cox proportional hazards modeling demonstrated that F/BEVAR for extensive TAAA was not associated with 1-year mortality (hazard ratio, 1.71; 95% confidence interval, 0.91-3.52; P = .13)., Conclusions: Unlike open TAAA repair, the F/BEVAR outcomes were similar for extensive and nonextensive TAAAs. The differences in perioperative paraparesis, branch instability, and type I or III endoleak likely resulted from the increasing length of aortic coverage and number of target arteries involved. These findings suggest that high-volume centers performing F/BEVAR should expect comparable outcomes for extensive and nonextensive TAAA repair., (Copyright © 2021 Society for Vascular Surgery. Published by Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.)- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
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4. Use of Social Media for Out-of-Class Communication to Enhance Learning: A pilot study.
- Author
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Diamond KR, Gurenlian JR, and Freudenthal J
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- California, Communication, Cross-Sectional Studies, Dental Hygienists, Humans, Idaho, Oregon, Pilot Projects, Utah, Washington, Social Media
- Abstract
Purpose: Higher education teaching has been traditionally delivered through a lecture format, limiting the opportunities for interpersonal communication between faculty and students. The purpose of this study was to determine whether entry-level dental hygiene (DH) students and faculty perceive social media (SM) applications as an effective out-of-class communication (OCC) tool for enhancing learning in a dental hygiene program. Methods: A cross-sectional, comparative research design was used for this pilot study. An investigator-designed, paper survey was administered to a convenience sample of entry-level DH students and faculty from nine dental hygiene programs in Utah, Idaho, Oregon, Washington, and California. Data were analyzed using descriptive and inferential statistics ( p= 0.05). Results: A total of 418 students and 149 faculty members met the eligibility criteria; 325 DH students (n=325) and 77 faculty completed the surveys (n=77) for a combined response rate of 70.9%. While most faculty and DH students agreed SM could enhance learning for OCC, their level of comfort using these applications varied. Both faculty and DH students use SM applications for questions about assignments, clarification on lecture topics, and feedback on assignments. Statistical significance was found for the frequency of using SM applications for OCC (X
2 =16.92; df =4; p =.002). Learning management systems were used and preferred most by both groups followed by Facebook. Statistical significance was found between both groups when ranking electronic devices for OCC. Conclusion: Dental hygiene students and faculty differ in their frequency and levels of comfort in using SM for out-of-class communication. Additional research related to the phenomenon of social media and communication to enhance learning in dental hygiene should be explored., (Copyright © 2019 The American Dental Hygienists’ Association.)- Published
- 2019
5. Prediction of postoperative myocardial infarction after suprainguinal bypass using the Vascular Quality Initiative Cardiac Risk Index.
- Author
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Diamond KR, Woo K, Neal D, Zhao Y, Glocker RJ, Bertges DJ, and Simons JP
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- Aged, Aged, 80 and over, Coronary Artery Disease epidemiology, Female, Humans, Incidence, Male, Middle Aged, Myocardial Infarction diagnosis, Peripheral Arterial Disease epidemiology, Registries, Retrospective Studies, Risk Assessment, Risk Factors, Time Factors, Treatment Outcome, United States epidemiology, Myocardial Infarction epidemiology, Peripheral Arterial Disease surgery, Vascular Grafting adverse effects
- Abstract
Background: The Vascular Quality Initiative (VQI) Cardiac Risk Index (CRI) was developed to estimate the risk of postoperative myocardial infarction (POMI) for noncardiac vascular procedures. Whereas suprainguinal bypass carried the second highest odds of POMI, the performance of the all-procedure model declined when it was applied to the suprainguinal subset. We sought to improve the VQI CRI for application in this high-risk group undergoing open revascularization for aortoiliac occlusive disease., Methods: The VQI Suprainguinal Bypass Registry was queried for elective procedures performed between January 2010 and March 2017. Logistic regression was used to create a model for estimating the risk of in-hospital POMI with preoperative variables including demographics, comorbidities, and planned inflow source. After adjustment for overfitting, internal validation was performed using both bootstrapping and 10-fold cross-validation methods., Results: Among 8157 procedures, the incidence of POMI was 3.2% (n = 258). After bootstrapping variable selection, age, graft inflow, preoperative stress test, American Society of Anesthesiologists class, indication for procedure, and coronary artery disease were chosen for inclusion as predictors in the final risk model. The final model demonstrated good discrimination (area under the curve = 0.725). On internal validation, the model discriminated well (area under the curve = 0.713), with good calibration (plot intercept = 0.0006 and slope = 1.001). Using this model, POMI risk estimates ranged from 0.6% to 30.4%., Conclusions: Whereas the incidence of POMI among all suprainguinal bypasses was 3%, model-based estimates ranged 50-fold, from 0.6% to 30.4%. This underscores the heterogeneity of this cohort and the need for patient-specific risk estimation. Although some of the strongest predictors were nonmodifiable (eg, age), the model provided specific estimates according to graft inflow and stress testing. This supraspecific VQI CRI module risk predictor may enhance preoperative counseling by influencing the decision to pursue preoperative stress testing and ultimately the type of revascularization strategy chosen., (Copyright © 2018 Society for Vascular Surgery. Published by Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.)
- Published
- 2019
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6. Reinterventions after fenestrated or branched endovascular aortic aneurysm repair.
- Author
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Dossabhoy SS, Simons JP, Diamond KR, Flahive JM, Aiello FA, Arous EJ, Messina LM, and Schanzer A
- Subjects
- Aged, Aged, 80 and over, Aortic Aneurysm, Abdominal mortality, Aortic Aneurysm, Abdominal pathology, Blood Vessel Prosthesis, Disease-Free Survival, Female, Humans, Male, Middle Aged, Retrospective Studies, Treatment Outcome, Aortic Aneurysm, Abdominal surgery, Blood Vessel Prosthesis Implantation, Endovascular Procedures, Reoperation
- Abstract
Objective: Reinterventions after fenestrated or branched endovascular aneurysm repair (F/B-EVAR) are sometimes necessary to maintain aneurysm exclusion or endograft and target artery patency. These reinterventions are nontrivial, potentially associated with morbidity, mortality, and resource utilization. Whereas rates, types, and outcomes of reintervention after infrarenal EVAR have been well described, they have not been well described for F/B-EVAR. We sought to characterize the morbidity, mortality, and resource utilization due to reinterventions after F/B-EVAR., Methods: All F/B-EVAR variables collected prospectively through a single-institution, Institutional Review Board-approved registry, which included patients enrolled in a physician-sponsored investigational device exemption trial (G130210), were reviewed (November 2010-December 2016). Reinterventions were defined as any procedure that was aneurysm related, device related, or target artery related. For patients with more than one reintervention, each intervention occurrence was treated as a discrete event. Reintervention type, indication, timing (perioperative, days 0-30; short term, days 31-180; midterm, >180 days), inpatient/outpatient, length of stay, and morbidity/mortality were recorded. Reintervention success was defined as resolution of the indication., Results: Among 123 consecutive F/B-EVARs (mean follow-up, 25 months), 32 patients (25%) underwent 54 reinterventions (one reintervention, 20 (63%) patients; two reinterventions, 6 (19%) patients; three reinterventions, 4 (13%) patients; four reinterventions, 1 (3.1%) patient; and six reinterventions, 1 (3.1%) patient). The most frequent indications were type III endoleaks (n = 15 [28%]), target artery occlusions (n = 7 [13%]), and stenoses (n = 6 [11%]). These were performed in the perioperative, short-term, and midterm time frames 17%, 41%, and 43% of the time, respectively. Reinterventions were percutaneous (67%), inpatient procedures (61%), with median length of stay of 5 days. Of the 32 reintervention patients, 4 experienced access site complications and 4 died <30 days after reintervention (3 were adjudicated as not aneurysm related/not reintervention related). In 31 of 32 (97%) patients, reintervention success was achieved., Conclusions: Reinterventions after F/B-EVAR were necessary in 26% of patients, most commonly for type III endoleaks and target artery complications. Whereas all but one reintervention was successful, many of these required complex procedures with significant morbidity and mortality. Development of strategies to eliminate type III endoleaks by improving component junction integrity and to ensure target artery primary patency are key next steps in the evolution of F/B-EVAR., (Copyright © 2018 Society for Vascular Surgery. Published by Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.)
- Published
- 2018
- Full Text
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7. COMP report: CPQR technical quality control guidelines for radiation treatment centers.
- Author
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Malkoske KE, Nielsen MK, Tantôt L, Pomerleau-Dalcourt N, Milette MP, Diamond KR, Frenière N, Bertrand MJ, Villarreal-Barajas JE, Sasaki DK, Schella J, Grant J, Schreiner LJ, and Bissonnette JP
- Subjects
- Canada, Humans, Health Physics, Medical Errors prevention & control, Practice Guidelines as Topic standards, Quality Control, Radiation Oncology organization & administration, Radiation Oncology standards, Research Report
- Abstract
The Canadian Organization of Medical Physicists (COMP), in close partnership with the Canadian Partnership for Quality Radiotherapy (CPQR) has developed a series of Technical Quality Control (TQC) guidelines for radiation treatment equipment. These guidelines outline the performance objectives that equipment should meet in order to ensure an acceptable level of radiation treatment quality. The TQC guidelines have been rigorously reviewed and field tested in a variety of Canadian radiation treatment facilities. The development process enables rapid review and update to keep the guidelines current with changes in technology. This announcement provides an introduction to the guidelines, describing their scope and how they should be interpreted. Details of recommended tests can be found in separate, equipment specific TQC guidelines published in the JACMP (COMP Reports), or the website of the Canadian Partnership for Quality Radiotherapy (www.cpqr.ca)., (© 2018 Royal Victoria Regional Health Centre. Journal of Applied Clinical Medical Physics published by Wiley Periodicals, Inc. on behalf of American Association of Physicists in Medicine.)
- Published
- 2018
- Full Text
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8. Measurement of skin surface dose distributions in radiation therapy using poly(vinyl alcohol) cryogel dosimeters.
- Author
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Eyadeh MM, Wierzbicki M, and Diamond KR
- Subjects
- Alcohols, Humans, Phantoms, Imaging, Radiation Dosimeters, Radiotherapy Dosage, Radiotherapy Planning, Computer-Assisted, Cryogels, Radiometry methods, Skin radiation effects
- Abstract
In external beam radiation therapy (EBRT), skin dose measurement is important to evaluate dose coverage of superficial target volumes. Treatment planning systems (TPSs) are often inaccurate in this region of the patient, so in vivo measurements are necessary for skin surface dose estimation. In this work, superficial dose distributions were measured using radiochromic translucent poly(vinyl alcohol) cryogels. The cryogels simultaneously served as bolus material, providing the necessary buildup to achieve the desired superficial dose. The relationship between dose to the skin surface and dose measured with the bolus was established using a series of oblique irradiations with gantry angles ranging from 0° to 90°. EBT-2 Gafchromic film was placed under the bolus, and the ratio of bolus-film dose was determined ranging from 0.749 ± 0.005 to 0.930 ± 0.002 for 0° and 90° gantry angles, respectively. The average ratio over 0-67.5° (0.800 ± 0.064) was used as the single correction factor to convert dose in bolus to dose to the skin surface. The correction factor was applied to bolus measurements of skin dose from head and neck intensity-modulated radiation therapy (IMRT) treatments delivered to a RANDO phantom. The resulting dose distributions were compared to film measurements using gamma analysis with a 3%/3 mm tolerance and a 10% threshold. The minimum gamma pass rate was 95.2% suggesting that the radiochromic bolus may provide an accurate estimation of skin surface dose using a simple correction factor. This study demonstrates the suitability of radiochromic cryogels for superficial dose measurements in megavoltage photon beams., (© 2017 The Authors. Journal of Applied Clinical Medical Physics published by Wiley Periodicals, Inc. on behalf of American Association of Physicists in Medicine.)
- Published
- 2017
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9. Translucent poly(vinyl alcohol) cryogel dosimeters for simultaneous dose buildup and monitoring during chest wall radiation therapy.
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Eyadeh MM, Weston MA, Juhasz J, and Diamond KR
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- Breast Neoplasms pathology, Female, Humans, Patient Positioning, Radiotherapy Dosage, Radiotherapy Planning, Computer-Assisted methods, Radiotherapy, Intensity-Modulated methods, Thoracic Wall pathology, Breast Neoplasms radiotherapy, Cryogels chemistry, Patient Care Planning, Polyvinyl Alcohol chemistry, Radiation Dosimeters, Thoracic Wall radiation effects
- Abstract
Chest wall radiation therapy treatment delivery was monitored using a 5 mm thick radiochromic poly(vinyl alcohol) cryogel that also provided buildup material. The cryogels were used to detect positioning errors and measure the impact of shifts for a chest wall treatment that was delivered to a RANDO phantom. The phantom was shifted by ± 2, ± 3, and ± 5 mm from the planned position in the anterior/posterior (A/P) direction; these shifts represent setup errors and the uncertainty associated with lung filling during breath-hold. The two-dimensional absolute dose distributions measured in the cryogel at the planned position were compared with the distributions at all shifts from this position using gamma analysis (3%/3 mm, 10% threshold). For shifts of ± 2, ± 3, and ± 5 mm the passing rates ranged from 94.3% to 95.6%, 74.0% to 78.8%, and 17.5% to 22.5%, respectively. These results are consistent with the same gamma analysis performed on dose planes calculated in the middle of the cryogel and on the phantom surface using our treatment plan-ning system, which ranged from 94.3% to 95.0%, 76.8% to 77.9%, and 23.5% to 24.3%, respectively. The Pinnacle dose planes were then scaled empirically and compared to the cryogel measurements. Using the same gamma metric, the pass rates ranged from 97.0% to 98.4%. The results of this study suggest that cryogels may be used as both a buildup material and to evaluate errors in chest wall treat-ment positioning during deep-inspiration breath-hold delivery. The cryogels are sensitive to A/P chest wall shifts of less than 3 mm, which potentially allows for the detection of clinically relevant errors., (© 2016 The Authors.)
- Published
- 2016
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10. 5-aminolevulinic acid for quantitative seek-and-treat of high-grade dysplasia in Barrett's esophagus cellular models.
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Yeh SC, Ling CS, Andrews DW, Patterson MS, Diamond KR, Hayward JE, Armstrong D, and Fang Q
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- Barrett Esophagus pathology, Cell Line, Tumor, Cell Survival, Humans, Intracellular Space metabolism, Protoporphyrins metabolism, Aminolevulinic Acid therapeutic use, Barrett Esophagus diagnosis, Barrett Esophagus therapy, Models, Biological, Photochemotherapy methods, Photosensitizing Agents therapeutic use
- Abstract
High-grade dysplasia (HGD) in Barrett’s esophagus (BE) poses increased risk for developing esophageal adenocarcinoma. To date, early detection and treatment of HGD regions are still challenging due to the sampling error from tissue biopsy and relocation error during the treatment after histopathological analysis. In this study, CP-A (metaplasia) and CP-B (HGD) cell lines were used to investigate the “seek-and-treat” potential using 5-aminolevulinic acid-induced protoporphyrin IX (PpIX). The photodynamic therapy photosensitizer then provides both a phototoxic effect and additional image contrast for automatic detection and real-time laser treatment. Complementary to our studies on automatic classification, this work focused on characterizing subcellular irradiation and the potential phototoxicity on both metaplasia and HGD. The treatment results showed that the HGD cells are less viable than metaplastic cells due to more PpIX production at earlier times. Also, due to mitochondrial localization of PpIX, a better killing effect was achieved by involving mitochondria or whole cells compared with just nucleus irradiation in the detected region. With the additional toxicity given by PpIX and potential morphological/textural differences for pattern recognition, this cellular platform serves as a platform to further investigate real-time “seek-and-treat” strategies in three-dimensional models for improving early detection and treatment of BE., (© 2015 Society of Photo-Optical Instrumentation Engineers (SPIE))
- Published
- 2015
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11. Evaluation of a ferrous benzoic xylenol orange transparent PVA cryogel radiochromic dosimeter.
- Author
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Eyadeh MM, Farrell TJ, and Diamond KR
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- Benzoic Acid chemistry, Cryogels chemistry, Ferrous Compounds chemistry, Phenols chemistry, Polyvinyl Alcohol chemistry, Radiometry methods, Sulfoxides chemistry
- Abstract
A stable cryogel dosimeter was prepared using ferrous benzoic xylenol orange (FBX) in a transparent poly-(vinyl alcohol) (PVA) cryogel matrix. Dose response was evaluated for different numbers of freeze-thaw cycles (FTCs), different concentrations of PVA, and ratios of water/dimethyl sulfoxide. Linear relationships between dose and absorbance were obtained in the range of 0-1000 cGy for all formulations. Increasing the concentration of PVA and number of FTCs resulted in increased absorbance and sensitivity. The effects of energy and dose rate were also evaluated. No significant dose rate dependence was observed over the range 1.05 to 6.33 Gy min(-1). No energy response was observed over photon energies of 6, 10, and 18 MV.
- Published
- 2014
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12. Monitoring photosensitizer uptake using two photon fluorescence lifetime imaging microscopy.
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Yeh SC, Diamond KR, Patterson MS, Nie Z, Hayward JE, and Fang Q
- Abstract
Photodynamic Therapy (PDT) provides an opportunity for treatment of various invasive tumors by the use of a cancer targeting photosensitizing agent and light of specific wavelengths. However, real-time monitoring of drug localization is desirable because the induction of the phototoxic effect relies on interplay between the dosage of localized drug and light. Fluorescence emission in PDT may be used to monitor the uptake process but fluorescence intensity is subject to variability due to scattering and absorption; the addition of fluorescence lifetime may be beneficial to probe site-specific drug-molecular interactions and cell damage. We investigated the fluorescence lifetime changes of Photofrin(®) at various intracellular components in the Mat-LyLu (MLL) cell line. The fluorescence decays were analyzed using a bi-exponential model, followed by segmentation analysis of lifetime parameters. When Photofrin(®) was localized at the cell membrane, the slow lifetime component was found to be significantly shorter (4.3 ± 0.5 ns) compared to those at other locations (cytoplasm: 7.3 ± 0.3 ns; mitochondria: 7.0 ± 0.2 ns, p < 0.05).
- Published
- 2012
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13. The use of magnetic field effects on photosensitizer luminescence as a novel probe for optical monitoring of oxygen in photodynamic therapy.
- Author
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Mermut O, Diamond KR, Cormier JF, Gallant P, Hô N, Leclair S, Marois JS, Noiseux I, Morin JF, Patterson MS, and Vernon ML
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- Fullerenes chemistry, Luminescent Agents chemical synthesis, Phantoms, Imaging, Photosensitizing Agents chemical synthesis, Time Factors, Luminescent Agents chemistry, Magnetics, Oxygen analysis, Photochemotherapy, Photosensitizing Agents chemistry
- Abstract
The effect of a magnetic field on the steady-state and time-resolved optical emission of a custom fullerene-linked photosensitizer (PS) in liposome cell phantoms was studied at various oxygen concentrations (0.19-190 microM). Zeeman splitting of the triplet state and hyperfine coupling, which control intersystem crossing between singlet and triplet states, are altered in the presence of low magnetic fields (B < 320 mT), perturbing the luminescence intensity and lifetime as compared to the triplet state at B = 0. Measurements of the luminescence intensity and lifetime were performed using a time-domain apparatus integrated with a magnet. We propose that by probing magnet-affected optical emissions, one can monitor the state of oxygenation throughout the course of photodynamic therapy. Since the magnetic field effect (MFE) operates primarily by affecting the radical ion pairs related to type I photodynamic action, the enhancement or suppression of the MFE can be used as a measure of the dynamic equilibrium between the type I and II photodynamic pathways. The unique photo-initiated charge-transfer properties of the PS used in this study allow it to serve as both cytotoxic agent and oxygen probe that can provide in situ dosimetric information at close to real time.
- Published
- 2009
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14. Effect of liposomal confinement on photothermal and photo-oximetric fluorescence lifetimes of photosensitizers with varying hydrophilicity.
- Author
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Mermut O, Noiseux I, Bouchard JP, Cormier JF, Desroches P, Fortin M, Gallant P, Leclair S, Vernon ML, Diamond KR, and Patterson MS
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- Hot Temperature, Hydrophobic and Hydrophilic Interactions, Light, Materials Testing, Photochemistry methods, Scattering, Radiation, Drug Carriers chemistry, Liposomes chemistry, Oxygen chemistry, Photosensitizing Agents chemistry
- Abstract
The time-resolved fluorescence of photosensitizers (PSs) of varying hydrophobicities, di-and tetrasulfonated Al phthalocyanines (Al-2 and Al-4), and Photochlor (HPPH), was investigated in liposomes used as cell-mimetic models. Using frequency-and time-domain apparatus, the fluorescence lifetime, tau(fluo), was compared for PSs free in aqueous solution and in a liposome-associated state at varied temperatures (25 to 78 degrees C) and oxygen concentrations (0-190 microM). The analysis of tau(fluo) revealed different decay behaviors for the free-solution and liposome-confined PSs, most significantly for the lipophilic HPPH. Hydrophilic PS drugs (Al-4, Al-2) were less affected by the liposomal confinement, depending on the relative hydrophilicity of the compound and the consequent localization in liposomes. Changes in the emission decay due to confinement were detected as differences in the lifetime between the bulk solution and the liposome-localized PS in response to heating and deoxygenation. Specifically, hydrophilic Al-4 produced an identical lifetime trend as a function of temperature both in solu and in a liposome-confined state. Hydrophobic HPPH exhibited a fundamental transformation in its fluorescence decay kinetics, transitioning from a multiexponential (in free solution) to single-exponential (in liposome) decay. Deoxygenation resulted in a ubiquitous tau(fluo) increase for all PSs in free solution, while the opposite, a tau(fluo) decrease, occurred in all liposomal PSs.
- Published
- 2008
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15. Effect of liposomal confinement on photochemical properties of photosensitizers with varying hydrophilicity.
- Author
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Noiseux I, Mermut O, Bouchard JP, Cormier JF, Desroches P, Fortin M, Gallant P, Leclair S, Vernon ML, Diamond KR, and Patterson MS
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- Hydrophobic and Hydrophilic Interactions, Light, Materials Testing, Photochemistry methods, Scattering, Radiation, Drug Carriers chemistry, Liposomes chemistry, Photosensitizing Agents chemistry
- Abstract
Preferential tumor localization and the aggregation state of photosensitizers (PSs) can depend on the hydrophilic/hydrophobic nature of the molecule and affect their phototoxicity. In this study, three PSs of different hydrophilicity are introduced in liposomes to understand the structure-photochemistry relationship of PSs in this cellular model system. Absorbance and fluorescence spectra of amphiphilic aluminum (III) phthalocyanine disulfonate chloride adjacent isomer (Al-2), hydrophilic aluminum (III) phthalocyanine chloride tetrasulfonic acid (Al-4), and lipophilic 2-(1-hexyloxyethyl)-2-devinyl pyropheophorbide (HPPH) are compared in a liposomal confined state with free PS in bulk solution. For fluorescence measurements, a broad range of concentrations of both bulk and liposomal confined PSs are examined to track the transition from monomers to dimers or higher order aggregates. Epifluorescence microscopy, absorbance, and fluorescence measurements all confirm different localization of the PSs in liposomes, depending on their hydrophilicity. In turn, the localization affects the aggregation of molecules inside the liposome cell model. Data obtained with such cellular models could be useful in optimizing the photochemical properties of photosensitizing drugs based on their structure-dependent interactions with cellular media and subcellular organelles.
- Published
- 2008
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16. Quantification of fluorophore concentration in vivo using two simple fluorescence-based measurement techniques.
- Author
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Diamond KR, Malysz PP, Hayward JE, and Patterson MS
- Subjects
- Animals, Calibration, Indoles analysis, Indoles pharmacokinetics, Models, Theoretical, Organometallic Compounds analysis, Organometallic Compounds pharmacokinetics, Osmolar Concentration, Phantoms, Imaging, Photosensitizing Agents analysis, Rabbits, Scattering, Radiation, Chemistry Techniques, Analytical, Fluorescence, Fluorescent Dyes analysis, Fluorometry
- Abstract
The effect of photodynamic therapy treatments depends on the concentration of photosensitizer at the treatment site; thus a simple method to quantify concentration is desirable. This study compares the concentration of a fluorophore and sensitizer, aluminum phthalocyanine tetrasulfonate (AlPcS4), measured by two simple fluorescence-based techniques in vivo to post mortem chemical extraction and fluorometric assay of those tissues: skin, muscle, fascia, liver, and kidney (cortex and medulla). Fluorescence was excited and detected by a single optical fiber, or by an instrument that measured the ratio of the fluorescence and excitation reflectance. The in vivo measurements were compared to calibration measurements made in tissue-simulating phantoms to estimate the tissue concentrations. Reasonable agreement was observed between the concentration estimates of the two instruments in the lighter colored tissues (skin, muscle, and fascia). The in vivo measurements also agreed with the chemical extractions at low (< 0.6 microg/g) tissue concentrations, but underestimated higher tissue concentrations. Measurements of fluorescence lifetime in vivo demonstrated that AlPcS4 retains its mono-exponential decay in skin, muscle, and fascia tissues with a lifetime similar to that measured in aqueous tissue-simulating phantoms. In liver and kidney an additional short lifetime component was evident., (Copyright 2005 Society of Photo-Optical Instrumentation Engineers.)
- Published
- 2005
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17. Measurement of fluorophore concentrations and fluorescence quantum yield in tissue-simulating phantoms using three diffusion models of steady-state spatially resolved fluorescence.
- Author
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Diamond KR, Farrell TJ, and Patterson MS
- Subjects
- Computer Simulation, Connective Tissue metabolism, Diffusion, Dihematoporphyrin Ether analysis, Dihematoporphyrin Ether chemistry, Fluorescent Dyes chemistry, Microscopy, Fluorescence instrumentation, Phantoms, Imaging, Porphyrins analysis, Porphyrins chemistry, Reproducibility of Results, Sensitivity and Specificity, Spectrometry, Fluorescence instrumentation, Algorithms, Connective Tissue chemistry, Fluorescent Dyes analysis, Microscopy, Fluorescence methods, Models, Chemical, Spectrometry, Fluorescence methods
- Abstract
Steady-state diffusion theory models of fluorescence in tissue have been investigated for recovering fluorophore concentrations and fluorescence quantum yield. Spatially resolved fluorescence, excitation and emission reflectance Carlo simulations, and measured using a multi-fibre probe on tissue-simulating phantoms containing either aluminium phthalocyanine tetrasulfonate (AlPcS4), Photofrin meso-tetra-(4-sulfonatophenyl)-porphine dihydrochloride The accuracy of the fluorophore concentration and fluorescence quantum yield recovered by three different models of spatially resolved fluorescence were compared. The models were based on: (a) weighted difference of the excitation and emission reflectance, (b) fluorescence due to a point excitation source or (c) fluorescence due to a pencil beam excitation source. When literature values for the fluorescence quantum yield were used for each of the fluorophores, the fluorophore absorption coefficient (and hence concentration) at the excitation wavelength (mu(a,x,f)) was recovered with a root-mean-square accuracy of 11.4% using the point source model of fluorescence and 8.0% using the more complicated pencil beam excitation model. The accuracy was calculated over a broad range of optical properties and fluorophore concentrations. The weighted difference of reflectance model performed poorly, with a root-mean-square error in concentration of about 50%. Monte Carlo simulations suggest that there are some situations where the weighted difference of reflectance is as accurate as the other two models, although this was not confirmed experimentally. Estimates of the fluorescence quantum yield in multiple scattering media were also made by determining mu(a,x,f) independently from the fitted absorption spectrum and applying the various diffusion theory models. The fluorescence quantum yields for AlPcS4 and TPPS4 were calculated to be 0.59 +/- 0.03 and 0.121 +/- 0.001 respectively using the point source model, and 0.63 +/- 0.03 and 0.129 +/- 0.002 using the pencil beam excitation model. These results are consistent with published values.
- Published
- 2003
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18. Quantification of fluorophore concentration in tissue-simulating media by fluorescence measurements with a single optical fiber.
- Author
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Diamond KR, Patterson MS, and Farrell TJ
- Subjects
- Absorption, Indoles analysis, Monte Carlo Method, Optical Fibers, Organometallic Compounds analysis, Osmolar Concentration, Scattering, Radiation, Solutions chemistry, Fiber Optic Technology, Fluorescence, Fluorescent Dyes analysis
- Abstract
Quantifying fluorescent compounds in turbid media such as tissue is made difficult by the effects of multiple scattering and absorption of the excitation and emission light. The approach that we used was to measure fluorescence using a single 200-microm optical fiber as both the illumination source and the detector. Fluorescence of aluminum phthalocyanine tetrasulfonate (AlPcS4) was measured over a wide range of fluorophore concentrations and optical properties in tissue-simulating phantoms. A root-mean-square accuracy of 10.6% in AlPcS4 concentration was attainable when fluorescence was measured either interstitially or at the phantom surface. The individual effects of scattering, absorption, and the scattering phase function on the fluorescence signal were also studied by experiments and Monte Carlo simulations.
- Published
- 2003
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19. Accuracy of noninvasive in vivo measurements of photosensitizer uptake based on a diffusion model of reflectance spectroscopy.
- Author
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Weersink RA, Hayward JE, Diamond KR, and Patterson MS
- Subjects
- Animals, Diffusion, Fiber Optic Technology, Indoles pharmacokinetics, Liver metabolism, Models, Biological, Monte Carlo Method, Muscles metabolism, Optical Fibers, Organometallic Compounds pharmacokinetics, Rabbits, Skin metabolism, Photosensitizing Agents pharmacokinetics, Spectrophotometry methods
- Abstract
This study compares the photosensitizer concentration measured noninvasively in vivo by diffuse reflectance spectroscopy with the results of postmortem tissue solubilization and fluorometric assay. The reflectance spectrometer consists of a fiber optic surface probe, spectrometer and charge-coupled device (CCD) array detector. The surface probe has eight detection fibers separated from the light source fiber by distances ranging from 0.85 to 10 mm. The imaging spectrometer disperses the light from each detector fiber onto the two-dimensional CCD array, while maintaining spatial separation of each individual spectrum. A single exposure of the CCD therefore captures the reflectance spectrum ar eight distances and over a range of 300 nm. From the spectra, the tissue's optical scattering and absorption coefficients are determined using a diffusion model of light propagation. Changes in the tissue absorption are used to estimate the photosensitizer concentration. Normal New Zealand White rabbits were injected with aluminum phthalocyanine tetrasulfonate (AlPcS4) and probe measurements made 24 h after injection on the dorsal skin, on muscle after surgically turning the skin back and on liver. For skin, the noninvasive estimate to proportional to the true concentration but low by a factor of 3. Based on Monte Carlo modeling of multilayered systems, this underestimate is attributed to the layered structure of the skin and nonuniform AlPcS4 distribution. A comparison of the noninvasive concentration estimates to the postmortem assay results finds good agreement for liver tissue even though application of the diffusion model is not strictly justified.
- Published
- 1997
- Full Text
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