43 research outputs found

    Differential influence of components resulting from atmospheric-pressure plasma on integrin expression of human HaCaT keratinocytes

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    Adequate chronic wound healing is a major problem in medicine. A new solution might be non-thermal atmospheric-pressure plasma effectively inactivating microorganisms and influencing cells in wound healing. Plasma components as, for example, radicals can affect cells differently. HaCaT keratinocytes were treated with Dielectric Barrier Discharge plasma (DBD/air, DBD/argon), ozone or hydrogen peroxide to find the components responsible for changes in integrin expression, intracellular ROS formation or apoptosis induction. Dependent on plasma treatment time reduction of recovered cells was observed with no increase of apoptotic cells, but breakdown of mitochondrial membrane potential. DBD/air plasma increased integrins and intracellular ROS. DBD/argon caused minor changes. About 100 ppm ozone did not influence integrins. Hydrogen peroxide caused similar effects compared to DBD/air plasma. In conclusion, effects depended on working gas and exposure time to plasma. Short treatment cycles did neither change integrins nor induce apoptosis or ROS. Longer treatments changed integrins as important for influencing wound healing. Plasma effects on integrins are rather attributed to induction of other ROS than to generation of ozone. Changes of integrins by plasma may provide new solutions of improving wound healing, however, conditions are needed which allow initiating the relevant influence on integrins without being cytotoxic to cells

    Hybrid PET- and MR-driven attenuation correction for enhanced ¹⁸F-NaF and ¹⁸F-FDG quantification in cardiovascular PET/MR imaging

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    Background: The standard MR Dixon-based attenuation correction (AC) method in positron emission tomography/magnetic resonance (PET/MR) imaging segments only the air, lung, fat and soft-tissues (4-class), thus neglecting the highly attenuating bone tissues and affecting quantification in bones and adjacent vessels. We sought to address this limitation by utilizing the distinctively high bone uptake rate constant Ki expected from ¹⁸F-Sodium Fluoride (¹⁸F-NaF) to segment bones from PET data and support 5-class hybrid PET/MR-driven AC for ¹⁸F-NaF and ¹⁸F-Fluorodeoxyglucose (¹⁸F-FDG) PET/MR cardiovascular imaging. Methods: We introduce 5-class Ki/MR-AC for (i) ¹⁸F-NaF studies where the bones are segmented from Patlak Ki images and added as the 5th tissue class to the MR Dixon 4-class AC map. Furthermore, we propose two alternative dual-tracer protocols to permit 5-class Ki/MR-AC for (ii) ¹⁸F-FDG-only data, with a streamlined simultaneous administration of ¹⁸F-FDG and ¹⁸F-NaF at 4:1 ratio (R4:1), or (iii) for ¹⁸F-FDG-only or both ¹⁸F-FDG and ¹⁸F-NaF dual-tracer data, by administering ¹⁸F-NaF 90 minutes after an equal ¹⁸F-FDG dosage (R1:1). The Ki-driven bone segmentation was validated against computed tomography (CT)-based segmentation in rabbits, followed by PET/MR validation on 108 vertebral bone and carotid wall regions in 16 human volunteers with and without prior indication of carotid atherosclerosis disease (CAD). Results: In rabbits, we observed similar (< 1.2% mean difference) vertebral bone ¹⁸F-NaF SUVmean scores when applying 5-class AC with Ki-segmented bone (5-class Ki/CT-AC) vs CT-segmented bone (5-class CT-AC) tissue. Considering the PET data corrected with continuous CT-AC maps as gold-standard, the percentage SUVmean bias was reduced by 17.6% (¹⁸F-NaF) and 15.4% (R4:1) with 5-class Ki/CT-AC vs 4-class CT-AC. In humans without prior CAD indication, we reported 17.7% and 20% higher ¹⁸F-NaF target-to-background ratio (TBR) at carotid bifurcations wall and vertebral bones, respectively, with 5- vs 4-class AC. In the R4:1 human cohort, the mean ¹⁸F-FDG:¹⁸F-NaF TBR increased by 12.2% at carotid bifurcations wall and 19.9% at vertebral bones. For the R1:1 cohort of subjects without CAD indication, mean TBR increased by 15.3% (¹⁸F-FDG) and 15.5% (¹⁸F-NaF) at carotid bifurcations and 21.6% (¹⁸F-FDG) and 22.5% (¹⁸F-NaF) at vertebral bones. Similar TBR enhancements were observed when applying the proposed AC method to human subjects with prior CAD indication. Conclusions: Ki-driven bone segmentation and 5-class hybrid PET/MR-driven AC is feasible and can significantly enhance ¹⁸F-NaF and ¹⁸F-FDG contrast and quantification in bone tissues and carotid walls

    A 32-channel parallel transmit system add-on for 7T MRI.

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    PurposeA 32-channel parallel transmit (pTx) add-on for 7 Tesla whole-body imaging is presented. First results are shown for phantom and in-vivo imaging.MethodsThe add-on system consists of a large number of hardware components, including modulators, amplifiers, SAR supervision, peripheral devices, a control computer, and an integrated 32-channel transmit/receive body array. B1+ maps in a phantom as well as B1+ maps and structural images in large volunteers are acquired to demonstrate the functionality of the system. EM simulations are used to ensure safe operation.ResultsGood agreement between simulation and experiment is shown. Phantom and in-vivo acquisitions show a field of view of up to 50 cm in z-direction. Selective excitation with 100 kHz sampling rate is possible. The add-on system does not affect the quality of the original single-channel system.ConclusionThe presented 32-channel parallel transmit system shows promising performance for ultra-high field whole-body imaging
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