In contrast to short-lived neutrophils, macrophages display persistent presence in the lung of animals after pulmonary exposure to carbon nanotubes. While effective in the clearance of bacterial pathogens and injured host cells, the ability of macrophages to “digest” carbonaceous nanoparticles has not been documented. Here, we used chemical, biochemical, and cell and animal models and demonstrated oxidative biodegradation of oxidatively functionalized single-walled carbon nanotubes via superoxide/NO* → peroxynitrite-driven oxidative pathways of activated macrophages facilitating clearance of nanoparticles from the lung.
Acute kidney injury (AKI) is a risk factor for the development of chronic kidney disease (CKD). One mechanism for this phenomenon is renal microvascular rarefaction and subsequent chronic impairment in perfusion. However, diagnostic tools to monitor the renal microvasculature in a noninvasive and quantitative manner are still lacking. Ultrasound super-resolution imaging is an emerging technology that can identify microvessels with unprecedented resolution. Here, we applied this imaging technique to identify microvessels in the unilateral ischemia-reperfusion injury mouse model of AKI-to-CKD progression in vivo. Kidneys from 21 and 42 day postischemia-reperfusion injury, the contralateral uninjured kidneys, and kidneys from sham-operated mice were examined by ultrasound super-resolution and histology. Renal microvessels were successfully identified by this imaging modality with a resolution down to 32 mm. Renal fibrosis was observed in all kidneys with ischemiareperfusion injury and was associated with a significant reduction in kidney size, cortical thickness, relative blood volume, and microvascular density as assessed by this imaging. Tortuosity of the cortical microvasculature was also significantly increased at 42 days compared to sham. These vessel density measurements correlated significantly with CD31 immunohistochemistry (R 2 [0.77). Thus, ultrasound super-resolution imaging provides unprecedented resolution and is capable of noninvasive quantification of renal vasculature changes associated with AKI-to-CKD progression in mice. Hence, this technique could be a promising diagnostic tool for monitoring progressive kidney disease.
Traditional ultrasound imaging techniques are limited in spatial resolution to visualize angiogenic vasa vasorum that is considered as an important marker for atherosclerotic plaque progression and vulnerability. The recently introduced super-resolution imaging technique based on microbubble center localization has shown potential to achieve unprecedented high spatial resolution beyond the acoustic diffraction limit. However, a major drawback of the current super-resolution imaging approach is low temporal resolution because it requires a large number of imaging frames. In this study, a new imaging sequence and signal processing approach for super-resolution ultrasound imaging are presented to improve temporal resolution by employing deconvolution and spatio-temporal-interframe-correlation based data acquisition. In vivo feasibility of the developed technology is demonstrated and evaluated in imaging vasa vasorum in the rabbit atherosclerosis model. The proposed method not only identifies a tiny vessel with a diameter of 41 μm, 5 times higher spatial resolution than the acoustic diffraction limit at 7.7 MHz, but also significantly improves temporal resolution that allows for imaging vessels over cardiac motion.
Phase-transition droplets have been proposed as promising contrast agents for ultrasound and photoacoustic imaging. Short pulse laser activated perfluorocarbon-based droplets, especially when in a medium with a temperature below their boiling point, undergo phase changes of vaporization and recondensation in response to pulsed laser irradiation. Here, we report and discuss the vaporization and recondensation dynamics of perfluoropentane droplets containing indocyanine green in response to a short pulsed laser with optical and acoustic measurements. To investigate the effect of temperature on the vaporization process, an imaging chamber was mounted on a temperature-controlled water reservoir and then the vaporization event was recorded at 5 million frames per second via a high-speed camera. The high-speed movies show that most of the droplets within the laser beam area expanded rapidly as soon as they were exposed to the laser pulse and immediately recondensed within 1–2 μs. The vaporization/recondensation process was consistently reproduced in six consecutive laser pulses to the same area. As the temperature of the media was increased above the boiling point of the perfluoropentane, the droplets were less likely to recondense and remained in a gas phase after the first vaporization. These observations will help to clarify the underlying processes and eventually guide the design of repeatable phase-transition droplets as a photoacoustic imaging contrast agent.
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