Tissue and Vascular Oxygenation Dynamics Determined by Optical Approaches and MRI

Tissue and Vascular Oxygenation Dynamics Determined by Optical Approaches and MRI

Author: Mengna Xia

Publisher: ProQuest

Published: 2007

Total Pages:

ISBN-13: 9780549145059

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Tumor oxygenation is a crucial factor to determine the efficiency of non-surgery therapy, such as radiotherapy and chemotherapy. Therefore, various approaches have been applied to tumor in order to improve the tumor oxygen level. Breathing oxygen-rich gas with normobaric or hyperbaric pressure has been demonstrated to overcome hypoxia, but with marginal success. Therefore, the outcome would be improved greatly, if the responsive tumors were identified in priori. Two non-invasive techniques were applied to monitor tumor oxygenation dynamics simultaneously when rats were exposed to hyperoxic gas intervention. 19F MRI provides tumor tissue oxygen tension (pO2) images, while Near Infrared Spectroscopy (NIRS) measures global tumor vascular dynamics. Multiple correlations were examined between the rate and magnitudes of vascular and tissue oxygen responses. In order to extract more physiological information from tumor vascular oxygen measured by NIRS, a mathematical model, modified from the Windkessel model, was used to obtain the tumor blood flow and oxygen consumption rate from hemoglobin concentration. Besides normobaric oxygen intervention, hyperbaric oxygen intervention was also adopted to improve tumor oxygenation because it increases oxygen tension and oxygen delivery to tissue independent of hemoglobin. Two techniques, FOXY(TM) fluorescence quenching oxygen sensor and NIRS, were applied simultaneously to monitor tumor tissue and vascular oxygen during and post hyperbaric oxygen administration, so as to investigate tumor oxygenation achieved with hyperbaric oxygen and the preservation of tumor oxygenation after hyperbaric oxygen intervention. I applied combined administration of doxorubicin and hyperbaric oxygen to tumors and compared the tumor oxygenation dynamics, tumor size, body weight between rats with combined therapy and those with doxorubicin alone. Combined application of MRI and NIRS, and FOXY(TM) oxygen sensor are novel methodology, which are complementary. Simultaneous application gives us a better understanding on the patho-physiology of tumor and response to therapeutic intervention.


Oxygen Transport to Tissue XL

Oxygen Transport to Tissue XL

Author: Oliver Thews

Publisher: Springer

Published: 2018-09-03

Total Pages: 452

ISBN-13: 3319912879

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The book contains the refereed contributions from the 45th Annual Meeting of the International Society on Oxygen Transport to Tissue (ISOTT) 2017. This volume covers cross-disciplinary work on a broad range of topics related to the dynamics of oxygen transport: microcirculation and vascular medicine; O2 deficiency and its impact on molecular processes in cells and tissues; cellular metabolism and mitochondrial function; multimodal functional imaging; mathematical modeling; the clinical relevance of oxygen supply as well as therapeutic interventions (e.g. in oncology or critical care medicine). The annual meetings of ISOTT bring together scientists from diverse fields (medicine, physiology, mathematics, biology, chemistry, physics, engineering, etc.) in a unique international forum. The book includes sections on brain oxygenation and function, NIRS oxygenation measurements, tumor oxygenation, cell metabolism, tissue oxygenation and treatment, methodical aspects of O2 measurements and physicochemical aspects of oxygen diffusion. Chapters 3, 24, 49 and 51 of this book are open access under a CC BY 4.0 license.


Oxygen Transport to Tissue XXIV

Oxygen Transport to Tissue XXIV

Author: Jeffrey Dunn

Publisher: Springer Science & Business Media

Published: 2012-12-06

Total Pages: 728

ISBN-13: 1461500753

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This volume contains refereed manuscripts prepared from presentations made at the 2ih annual meeting of the International Society on Oxygen Transport to Tissue (ISOTT). The meeting was held in Hanover, NH, USA, at Dartmouth Medical School, the 3rd oldest medical school in the USA. ISOTT attempts to produce high quality pUblications on cutting edge topics relating to oxygen in living systerns. The goal is to allow contributors to contribute original data, as with a main-stream journal article, but also to voice individual opinions and ideas in a more relaxed scientific forum. The meeting brought together an international group of scientists who share a common interest in the measurement and role of oxygen in living systems. The organizers of ISOTT99 made a special effort to bring together people from industry, medicine, and basic sciences in order to improve the links in the chain of discovery through to application. As a result, this volume contains publications on a range of subjects. There are contributions from companies on modifiers of oxygen carrying capacity (allosteric modifiers of hemoglobin and infusible oxygen carriers or blood substitutes); technical reports on oxygen measurement devices including advances in near-infrared spectroscopy and imaging, oxygen electrodes, magnetic resonance spectroscopy and imaging, and fluorescence based measurements. There are medically related sections on modifying and measuring tumor oxygenation in order to improve therapy, assessment and interpretation of oxygenation in the central nervous system, and general issues relating oxygen to pathological conditions.


Oxygen Transport to Tissue XXXII

Oxygen Transport to Tissue XXXII

Author: Joseph C. LaManna

Publisher: Springer Science & Business Media

Published: 2011-03-29

Total Pages: 371

ISBN-13: 1441977562

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This book covers all aspects of oxygen delivery to tissue, including blood flow and its regulation as well as oxygen metabolism. Special attention will be paid to methods of oxygen measurement in living tissue and application of these technologies to understanding physiological and biochemical basis for pathology related to tissue oxygenation. This book is multidisciplinary and designed to bring together experts and students from a range of research fields including biochemical engineering, physiology, microcirculation, and hematology.


Oxygen Transport to Tissue XXXIX

Oxygen Transport to Tissue XXXIX

Author: Howard J. Halpern

Publisher: Springer

Published: 2017-07-06

Total Pages: 427

ISBN-13: 3319552317

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This volume presents all aspects of delivery of oxygen to tissues and tumors in peer reviewed short articles. Both overview and the most recent, advanced techniques for oxygen measurement are presented. Articles and peer reviewers include those from leaders in their field. Topics such as molecular signaling in the organismal and tumor response to low levels of local oxygenation, hypoxia inducible factor (HIF) , cancer metabolism, individual human and animal response to oxygen changes monitored by optical/near infrared spectroscopy/ tomography to novel electron resonance spectroscopy and spectroscopic imaging, instrumentation, progress in blood substitute research, retinal physiology, cellular hypoxia, mitochondrial function; brain oxygenation and function; oxygen transport in sports, hypoxia in diseases and clinical care. Chapters 10 and 19 of this book are open access under a CC BY 4.0 license.


Oxygen Transport to Tissue XL

Oxygen Transport to Tissue XL

Author: International Society on Oxygen Transport to Tissue. Annual Meeting

Publisher:

Published: 2018

Total Pages: 452

ISBN-13: 9783319912868

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"The book contains the refereed contributions from the 45th Annual Meeting of the International Society on Oxygen Transport to Tissue (ISOTT) 2017. This volume covers cross-disciplinary work on a broad range of topics related to the dynamics of oxygen transport: microcirculation and vascular medicine; O2 deficiency and its impact on molecular processes in cells and tissues; cellular metabolism and mitochondrial function; multimodal functional imaging; mathematical modeling; the clinical relevance of oxygen supply as well as therapeutic interventions (e.g. in oncology or critical care medicine). The annual meetings of ISOTT bring together scientists from diverse fields (medicine, physiology, mathematics, biology, chemistry, physics, engineering, etc.) in a unique international forum. The book includes sections on brain oxygenation and function, NIRS oxygenation measurements, tumor oxygenation, cell metabolism, tissue oxygenation and treatment, methodical aspects of O2 measurements and physicochemical aspects of oxygen diffusion"--Publisher's description.


Oxygen Transport to Tissue XXVI

Oxygen Transport to Tissue XXVI

Author: Paul Okunieff

Publisher: Springer Science & Business Media

Published: 2006-06-18

Total Pages: 390

ISBN-13: 0387262067

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The International Society of Oxygen Transport to Tissue (ISOTT) was founded in 1973 to provide a forum for bioengineers, basic scientists, physiologists, and physicians to discuss new data, original theories, new interpretations of old data, and new technologies for the measurement of oxygen. At each annual meeting all posters are presented orally along with plenary lectures, and all presentations are given in a general session attended by everyone. Each meeting has had a specific focus, ranging from neonatology to physical chemistry to cancer biology. The Society has helped to build many careers, through opportunities to meet leaders in the field, and through awards made to young physicians and scientists. The Society also, through cross fertilization of ideas and scientific comradery, has inspired many breakthroughs in clinical medicine that now benefit mankind. I find myself president of the society after having been a winner of the Melvin Knisely Award for young scientists, in 1991. The 2003 meeting emphasized the role of oxygen and oxygen measurement in tumor growth, metastasis, physiology, and treatment resistance. Additionally, however, completely novel approaches to measurement of tissue oxygen were presented (notably work by Dr. Takahashi) and molecular methods for estimating tissue oxygen were evaluated. Papers discussing other aspects of oxygen measurement and pathophysiology were presented including in vivo ESR spectroscopy (notably including Dr. Swartz and colleagues), exercise physiology, organ transplant outcome (discussed by Dr. Cicco, our 2004 president), circulatory physiology, and cerebral oxygenation (notably including Dr. Chance).