6 research outputs found

    Tracheal Burning from Hot Air Inhalation

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    Burns in the trachea from inhaling hot gases are a common occurrence and threaten the recovery of fire victims. Inhalation injury is also one of the most common causes of death, especially among children and the elderly. The thermal injury to the respiratory tract is usually limited to the upper respiratory tract, mainly the trachea. A better understanding of the interplay between transient temperature and injury distribution over the trachea may help to direct treatments in the future. Our goal is to model burns in tracheal tissue as a function of time, inhalation temperature, and inhalation velocity. The objective is to understand how variations in those variables affect tracheal injury. The velocity of air in the trachea varies as a function of time due to inspiration and expiration. As a result, the air temperature fluctuates in a cyclical manner. Since the burn concentration is a function of temperature, the extent of the burn rises as temperature increases with inspiration and remains constant as temperature decreases during expiration. Our model shows burn concentration is limited to the entrance to the trachea and the surface of the trachea

    Optimizing Two-Color Semiconductor Nanocrystal Immunoassays in Single Well Microtiter Plate Formats

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    The simultaneous detection of two analytes, chicken IgY (IgG) and Staphylococcal enterotoxin B (SEB), in the single well of a 96-well plate is demonstrated using luminescent semiconductor quantum dot nanocrystal (NC) tracers. The NC-labeled antibodies were prepared via sulfhydryl-reactive chemistry using a facile protocol that took <3 h. Dose response curves for each target were evaluated in a single immunoassay format and compared to Cy5, a fluorophore commonly used in fluorescent immunoassays, and found to be equivalent. Immunoassays were then performed in a duplex format, demonstrating multiplex detection in a single well with limits of detection equivalent to the single assay format: 9.8 ng/mL chicken IgG and 7.8 ng/mL SEB

    Evaluation of Optical Detection Platforms for Multiplexed Detection of Proteins and the Need for Point-of-Care Biosensors for Clinical Use

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    This review investigates optical sensor platforms for protein multiplexing, the ability to analyze multiple analytes simultaneously. Multiplexing is becoming increasingly important for clinical needs because disease and therapeutic response often involve the interplay between a variety of complex biological networks encompassing multiple, rather than single, proteins. Multiplexing is generally achieved through one of two routes, either through spatial separation on a surface (different wells or spots) or with the use of unique identifiers/labels (such as spectral separation—different colored dyes, or unique beads—size or color). The strengths and weaknesses of conventional platforms such as immunoassays and new platforms involving protein arrays and lab-on-a-chip technology, including commercially-available devices, are discussed. Three major public health concerns are identified whereby detecting medically-relevant markers using Point-of-Care (POC) multiplex assays could potentially allow for a more efficient diagnosis and treatment of diseases

    Evaluation of optical sensor platforms for multiplexed detection of proteins

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    This work investigated optical sensor platforms for protein multiplexing, the ability to analyze multiple analytes simultaneously. Multiplexing is becoming increasingly important for clinical needs because disease and therapeutic response often involve the interplay between a variety of complex biological networks involving multiple, rather than single, proteins. Moreover, one biomarker may be indicative of more than one disease, similar diseases can manifest with similar physical symptoms, and monitoring a disease requires the ability to detect subtle differences over time. Multiplexing is generally achieved through one of two routes, either through spatial separation on a surface (different wells or spots) or with the use of unique identifiers/labels (such as spectral separation – different colored dyes, or unique beads – size or color). We looked into combining both spatial separation and unique labels to further expand the multiplexing capabilities of surfaces. Our original research resulted in one of the few demonstrations of reactive semiconductor nanocrystal immunoassays for multiplexed analysis within a single well on a microtiter plate. Innovative planar surface fluorescent immunoassays were developed for both spatial and spectral multiplexing using Quantum Dots and prospective incorporation into a Point-of-Care (POC) device involving an evanescent wave scanner. These assays used standard microscope slides combined with flow cells and were designed to markedly reduce the amount of sample and reagents needed as compared to standard 96-well plate assays. The platform was optimized for detecting Chicken IgG and Staphylococcal Enterotoxin B (SEB); SEB is commonly used in the literature to characterize the performance of biosensor platforms. The planar surface fluorescent immunoassays were applied to a real-world public health need to detect renal injury. Two emerging novel biomarkers, Kidney Injury Marker-1 (KIM-1) and Neutrophil Gelatinase Associated Lipocalin (NGAL), were investigated for their potential to detect injury earlier and with more specificity than current methods using serum creatinine (SCr). Detecting these medically-relevant markers using planar surface fluorescence immunoassays could potentially allow for more rapid diagnosis of acute kidney injury (AKI), among other uses
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