178 research outputs found
Nanomechanical and topographical imaging of living cells by Atomic Force Microscopy with colloidal probes
Atomic Force Microscopy (AFM) has a great potential as a tool to characterize
mechanical and morphological properties of living cells; these properties have
been shown to correlate with cells' fate and patho-physiological state in view
of the development of novel early-diagnostic strategies. Although several
reports have described experimental and technical approaches for the
characterization of cell elasticity by means of AFM, a robust and commonly
accepted methodology is still lacking. Here we show that micrometric spherical
probes (also known as colloidal probes) are well suited for performing a
combined topographic and mechanical analysis of living cells, with spatial
resolution suitable for a complete and accurate mapping of cell morphological
and elastic properties, and superior reliability and accuracy in the mechanical
measurements with respect to conventional and widely used sharp AFM tips. We
address a number of issues concerning the nanomechanical analysis, including
the applicability of contact mechanical models and the impact of a constrained
contact geometry on the measured elastic modulus (the finite-thickness effect).
We have tested our protocol by imaging living PC12 and MDA-MB-231 cells, in
order to demonstrate the importance of the correction of the finite-thickness
effect and the change in cell elasticity induced by the action of a
cytoskeleton-targeting drug.Comment: 51 pages, 12 figures, 3 table
Occupancy Estimation Using Low-Cost Wi-Fi Sniffers
Real-time measurements on the occupancy status of indoor and outdoor spaces
can be exploited in many scenarios (HVAC and lighting system control, building
energy optimization, allocation and reservation of spaces, etc.). Traditional
systems for occupancy estimation rely on environmental sensors (CO2,
temperature, humidity) or video cameras. In this paper, we depart from such
traditional approaches and propose a novel occupancy estimation system which is
based on the capture of Wi-Fi management packets from users' devices. The
system, implemented on a low-cost ESP8266 microcontroller, leverages a
supervised learning model to adapt to different spaces and transmits occupancy
information through the MQTT protocol to a web-based dashboard. Experimental
results demonstrate the validity of the proposed solution in four different
indoor university spaces.Comment: Submitted to Balkancom 201
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Cost of Coexisting with a Relict Large Carnivore Population: Impact of Apennine Brown Bears, 2005-2015.
Human-carnivore conflicts are a major conservation issue. As bears are expanding their range in Europe's human-modified landscapes, it is increasingly important to understand, prevent, and address human-bear conflicts and evaluate mitigation strategies in areas of historical coexistence. Based on verified claims, we assessed costs, patterns, and drivers of bear damages in the relict Apennine brown bear population in the Abruzzo Lazio and Molise National Park (PNALM), central Italy. During 2005-2015, 203 ± 71 (SD) damage events were verified annually, equivalent to 75,987 ± 30,038 €/year paid for compensation. Most damages occurred in summer and fall, with livestock depredation, especially sheep and cattle calves, prevailing over other types of damages, with apiaries ranking second in costs of compensation. Transhumant livestock owners were less impacted than residential ones, and farms that adopted prevention measures loaned from the PNALM were less susceptible to bear damages. Livestock farms chronically damaged by bears represented 8 ± 3% of those annually impacted, corresponding to 24 ± 6% of compensation costs. Further improvements in the conflict mitigation policy adopted by the PNALM include integrated prevention, conditional compensation, and participatory processes. We discuss the implications of our study for Human-bear coexistence in broader contexts
Unifocality as Prognostic Factor for Unilateral Retinoblastoma: Preliminary Results of 32 Eyes Treated with Intra-Arterial Chemotherapy Alone
Purpose: To evaluate the role of intra-arterial chemotherapy (IAC) in the management of unilateral, unifocal retinoblastoma (RB) as a single therapy, associated to neither focal nor systemic adjunctive therapies.
Methods: Prospective, single center, interventional case series of 32 consecutive eyes diagnosed with unilateral unifocal RB and treated exclusively with selective ophthalmic intra-arterial chemotherapy, with no adjunctive systemic or focal treatments.
Results: Full regression of the lesion was observed in 30 eyes (93.75%). 2 eyes were enucleated. Ophthalmoscopic remissions type I and III with higher calcific component were achieved. Additionally, neither recurrences nor new tumors appeared during the patient follow-up, which ranged from 10 months to 13 years.
Conclusion: Selective intra-arterial chemotherapy has demonstrated to be highly effective in terms of disease control and anatomical preservation in case of unilateral unifocal disease, without requiring any additional systemic and/or focal therapy
Conversion of nanoscale topographical information of cluster-assembled zirconia surfaces into mechanotransductive events promotes neuronal differentiation
Additional file 4: Table S1. Proteomic data for upregulated proteins. Proteins upregulated (compared to flat-Zr) or present only in cells grown on ns-Zr15. Adhesome proteins and proteins with roles in mechanobiological processes are marked in dark and light grey, respectively
MRI-based assessment of the pineal gland in a large population of children aged 0-5 years and comparison with pineoblastoma: part I, the solid gland.
Differentiation between normal solid (non-cystic) pineal glands and pineal pathologies on brain MRI is difficult. The aim of this study was to assess the size of the solid pineal gland in children (0-5 years) and compare the findings with published pineoblastoma cases.
We retrospectively analyzed the size (width, height, planimetric area) of solid pineal glands in 184 non-retinoblastoma patients (73 female, 111 male) aged 0-5 years on MRI. The effect of age and gender on gland size was evaluated. Linear regression analysis was performed to analyze the relation between size and age. Ninety-nine percent prediction intervals around the mean were added to construct a normal size range per age, with the upper bound of the predictive interval as the parameter of interest as a cutoff for normalcy.
There was no significant interaction of gender and age for all the three pineal gland parameters (width, height, and area). Linear regression analysis gave 99 % upper prediction bounds of 7.9, 4.8, and 25.4 mm(2), respectively, for width, height, and area. The slopes (size increase per month) of each parameter were 0.046, 0.023, and 0.202, respectively. Ninety-three percent (95 % CI 66-100 %) of asymptomatic solid pineoblastomas were larger in size than the 99 % upper bound.
This study establishes norms for solid pineal gland size in non-retinoblastoma children aged 0-5 years. Knowledge of the size of the normal pineal gland is helpful for detection of pineal gland abnormalities, particularly pineoblastoma
Magnetic Resonance Imaging Can Reliably Differentiate Optic Nerve Inflammation from Tumor Invasion in Retinoblastoma with Orbital Cellulitis
PURPOSE
To investigate the prevalence and magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) phenotype of retinoblastoma-associated orbital cellulitis. Additionally, this study aimed to identify postlaminar optic nerve enhancement (PLONE) patterns differentiating between inflammation and tumor invasion.
DESIGN
A monocenter cohort study assessed the prevalence of orbital cellulitis features on MRI in retinoblastoma patients. A multicenter case-control study compared MRI features of the retinoblastoma-associated orbital cellulitis cases with retinoblastoma controls.
PARTICIPANTS
A consecutive retinoblastoma patient cohort of 236 patients (311 eyes) was retrospectively investigated. Subsequently, 30 retinoblastoma cases with orbital cellulitis were compared with 30 matched retinoblastoma controls without cellulitis.
METHODS
In the cohort study, retinoblastoma MRI scans were scored on presence of inflammatory features. In the case-control study, MRI scans were scored on intraocular features and PLONE patterns. Postlaminar enhancement patterns were compared with histopathologic assessment of postlaminar tumor invasion. Interreader agreement was assessed, and exact tests with Bonferroni correction were adopted for statistical comparisons.
MAIN OUTCOME MEASURES
Prevalence of retinoblastoma-associated orbital cellulitis on MRI was calculated. Frequency of intraocular MRI features was compared between cases and controls. Sensitivity and specificity of postlaminar optic nerve patterns for detection of postlaminar tumor invasion were assessed.
RESULTS
The MRI prevalence of retinoblastoma-associated orbital cellulitis was 6.8% (16/236). Retinoblastoma with orbital cellulitis showed significantly more tumor necrosis, uveal abnormalities (inflammation, hemorrhage, and necrosis), lens luxation (all P < 0.001), and a larger eye size (P = 0.012). The inflammatory pattern of optic nerve enhancement (strong enhancement similar to adjacent choroid) was solely found in orbital cellulitis cases, of which none (0/16) showed tumor invasion on histopathology. Invasive pattern enhancement was found in both cases and controls, of which 50% (5/10) showed tumor invasion on histopathology. Considering these different enhancement patterns suggestive for either inflammation or tumor invasion increased specificity for detection of postlaminar tumor invasion in orbital cellulitis cases from 32% (95% confidence interval [CI], 16-52) to 89% (95% CI, 72-98).
CONCLUSIONS
Retinoblastoma cases presenting with orbital cellulitis show MRI findings of a larger eye size, extensive tumor necrosis, uveal abnormalities, and lens luxation. Magnetic resonance imaging contrast-enhancement patterns within the postlaminar optic nerve can differentiate between tumor invasion and inflammatory changes
Correlation of gene expression with magnetic resonance imaging features of retinoblastoma: a multi-center radiogenomics validation study
OBJECTIVES
To validate associations between MRI features and gene expression profiles in retinoblastoma, thereby evaluating the repeatability of radiogenomics in retinoblastoma.
METHODS
In this retrospective multicenter cohort study, retinoblastoma patients with gene expression data and MRI were included. MRI features (scored blinded for clinical data) and matched genome-wide gene expression data were used to perform radiogenomic analysis. Expression data from each center were first separately processed and analyzed. The end product normalized expression values from different sites were subsequently merged by their Z-score to permit cross-sites validation analysis. The MRI features were non-parametrically correlated with expression of photoreceptorness (radiogenomic analysis), a gene expression signature informing on disease progression. Outcomes were compared to outcomes in a previous described cohort.
RESULTS
Thirty-six retinoblastoma patients were included, 15 were female (42%), and mean age was 24 (SD 18) months. Similar to the prior evaluation, this validation study showed that low photoreceptorness gene expression was associated with advanced stage imaging features. Validated imaging features associated with low photoreceptorness were multifocality, a tumor encompassing the entire retina or entire globe, and a diffuse growth pattern (all p < 0.05). There were a number of radiogenomic associations that were also not validated.
CONCLUSIONS
A part of the radiogenomic associations could not be validated, underlining the importance of validation studies. Nevertheless, cross-center validation of imaging features associated with photoreceptorness gene expression highlighted the capability radiogenomics to non-invasively inform on molecular subtypes in retinoblastoma.
CLINICAL RELEVANCE STATEMENT
Radiogenomics may serve as a surrogate for molecular subtyping based on histopathology material in an era of eye-sparing retinoblastoma treatment strategies.
KEY POINTS
- Since retinoblastoma is increasingly treated using eye-sparing methods, MRI features informing on molecular subtypes that do not rely on histopathology material are important.
- A part of the associations between retinoblastoma MRI features and gene expression profiles (radiogenomics) were validated.
- Radiogenomics could be a non-invasive technique providing information on the molecular make-up of retinoblastoma
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