32 research outputs found

    High optode-density wearable diffuse optical probe for monitoring paced breathing hemodynamics in breast tissue

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    Significance: Diffuse optical imaging (DOI) provides in vivo quantification of tissue chromophores such as oxy- and deoxyhemoglobin ([Formula: see text] and HHb, respectively). These parameters have been shown to be useful for predicting neoadjuvant treatment response in breast cancer patients. However, most DOI devices designed for the breast are nonportable, making frequent longitudinal monitoring during treatment a challenge. Furthermore, hemodynamics related to the respiratory cycle are currently unexplored in the breast and may have prognostic value. Aim: To design, fabricate, and validate a high optode-density wearable continuous wave diffuse optical probe for the monitoring of breathing hemodynamics in breast tissue. Approach: The probe has a rigid-flex design with 16 dual-wavelength sources and 16 detectors. Performance was characterized on tissue-simulating phantoms, and validation was performed through flow phantom and cuff occlusion measurements. The breasts of [Formula: see text] healthy volunteers were measured while performing a breathing protocol. Results: The probe has 512 unique source–detector (S-D) pairs that span S-D separations of 10 to 54 mm. It exhibited good performance characteristics: [Formula: see text] drift of 0.34%/h, [Formula: see text] precision of 0.063%, and mean [Formula: see text] up to 41 mm S-D separation. Absorption contrast was detected in flow phantoms at depths exceeding 28 mm. A cuff occlusion measurement confirmed the ability of the probe to track expected hemodynamics in vivo. Breast measurements on healthy volunteers during paced breathing revealed median signal-to-motion artifact ratios ranging from 8.1 to 8.7 dB. Median [Formula: see text] and [Formula: see text] amplitudes ranged from 0.39 to [Formula: see text] and 0.08 to [Formula: see text] , respectively. Median oxygen saturations at the respiratory rate ranged from 82% to 87%. Conclusions: A wearable diffuse optical probe has been designed and fabricated for the measurement of breast tissue hemodynamics. This device is capable of quantifying breathing-related hemodynamics in healthy breast tissue

    Unzipping Kinetics of Double-Stranded DNA in a Nanopore

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    We studied the unzipping kinetics of single molecules of double-stranded DNA by pulling one of their two strands through a narrow protein pore. PCR analysis yielded the first direct proof of DNA unzipping in such a system. The time to unzip each molecule was inferred from the ionic current signature of DNA traversal. The distribution of times to unzip under various experimental conditions fit a simple kinetic model. Using this model, we estimated the enthalpy barriers to unzipping and the effective charge of a nucleotide in the pore, which was considerably smaller than previously assumed.Comment: 10 pages, 5 figures, Accepted: Physics Review Letter

    Optimization of Stress-Based Microfluidic Testing for Methicillin Resistance in Staphylococcus aureus Strains

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    The rapid evolution of antibiotic resistance in bacterial pathogens is driving the development of innovative, rapid antibiotic susceptibility testing (AST) tools as a way to provide more targeted and timely antibiotic treatment. We have previously presented a stress-based microfluidic method for the rapid determination of antibiotic susceptibility in methicillin-susceptible Staphylococcus aureus (MSSA) and methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus (MRSA). In this method, stress is used to potentiate the action of antibiotics, and cell death is measured as a proxy for susceptibility. The method allows antibiotic susceptibility to be determined within an hour from the start of the antibiotic introduction. However, the relatively low dynamic range of the signal (2–10% cell response) even with high antibiotic concentrations (10–50 µg/mL) left room for the method’s optimization. We have conducted studies in which we varied the flow patterns, the media composition, and the antibiotic concentration to increase the cell death response and concordantly decrease the required antibiotic concentration down to 1–3 µg/mL, in accordance with the Clinical and Laboratory Standards Institute’s (CLSI) guidelines for AST breakpoint concentrations

    Automated tissue dissociation for rapid extraction of viable cells

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    Viable cells from healthy tissues are a rich resource in high demand for many next-generation therapeutics and regenerative medicine applications. Cell extraction from the dense connective matrix of most tissues is a labor-intensive task and high variability makes cGMP compliance difficult. To reduce costs and ensure greater reproducibility, automated tissue dissociators compatible with robotic liquid handling systems are required. Here we demonstrate the utility of our automated tissue dissociator that is compatible with standard microtiter well plates for high-throughput processing. We show that viable cell yields match or exceed manual methods while reducing processing time by at least 85%

    Parallelization in automated stem cell culture

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    Stem cells play a dominant role in biological research and have a significant potential, as test systems for drug screening, disease modeling and therapeutic applications. The automated production of different stem cell types such as iPS and MSC has been realized in recent years by a few research groups. Yet, it requires different approaches in parallelization compared to conventional automated production because of the nature of the living cells on the one hand, and the production system with various interconnected devices on the other hand. Within this work, we present an approach for parallel processing on an automated cell culture platform

    Results from PCR.

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    <p>A: PCR data show that pellets from whole blood samples (10 mL) spiked with higher concentrations of MSSA amplify sooner (pellet volume in PCR well = 8 ÎĽL). B: Contingency table for PCR analysis of processed positive (100 CFU/mL) and negative (0 CFU/mL) whole blood samples.</p

    List of microorganisms used in the current study and their cultivation conditions.

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    <p><sup><i>a</i></sup> Gram-positive bacterium;</p><p><sup><i>b</i></sup> Gram-negative bacterium;</p><p><sup><i>c</i></sup> Yeast</p><p>List of microorganisms used in the current study and their cultivation conditions.</p
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