Browsing by Subject "Drug therapy"
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Item Open Access All-fiber nanosecond laser system generating supercontinuum spectrum for photoacoustic imaging(IEEE, 2013) Yavas, S.; Kipergil, E. A.; Akçaalan, Önder; Eldeniz, Y. Burak; Arabul, U.; Erkol H.; Unlu, M.B.; Ilday, F. ÖmerPhotoacoustic microscopy (PAM) research, as an imaging modality, has shown promising results in imaging angiogenesis and cutaneous malignancies like melanoma, revealing systemic diseases including diabetes, hypertension, coronery artery, cardiovascular disease from their effect on the microvasculature, tracing drug efficiency and assessment of therapy, monitoring healing processes such as wound cicatrization, brain imaging and mapping, neuroscientific evaluations. Clinically, PAM can be used as a diagnostic and predictive medicine tool; even have a part in disease prevention[1]. © 2013 IEEE.Item Open Access Dopamine replacement therapy, learning and reward prediction in Parkinson’s disease: Implications for rehabilitation(Frontiers Research Foundation, 2016) Ferrazzoli, D.; Carter, A.; Ustun, F. S.; Palamara, G.; Ortelli, P.; Maestri, R.; Yucel, M.; Frazzitta, G.The principal feature of Parkinson’s disease (PD) is the impaired ability to acquire and express habitual-automatic actions due to the loss of dopamine in the dorsolateral striatum, the region of the basal ganglia associated with the control of habitual behavior. Dopamine replacement therapy (DRT) compensates for the lack of dopamine, representing the standard treatment for different motor symptoms of PD (such as rigidity, bradykinesia and resting tremor). On the other hand, rehabilitation treatments, exploiting the use of cognitive strategies, feedbacks and external cues, permit to “learn to bypass” the defective basal ganglia (using the dorsolateral area of the prefrontal cortex) allowing the patients to perform correct movements under executive-volitional control. Therefore, DRT and rehabilitation seem to be two complementary and synergistic approaches. Learning and reward are central in rehabilitation: both of these mechanisms are the basis for the success of any rehabilitative treatment. Anyway, it is known that “learning resources” and reward could be negatively influenced from dopaminergic drugs. Furthermore, DRT causes different well-known complications: among these, dyskinesias, motor fluctuations, and dopamine dysregulation syndrome (DDS) are intimately linked with the alteration in the learning and reward mechanisms and could impact seriously on the rehabilitative outcomes. These considerations highlight the need for careful titration of DRT to produce the desired improvement in motor symptoms while minimizing the associated detrimental effects. This is important in order to maximize the motor re-learning based on repetition, reward and practice during rehabilitation. In this scenario, we review the knowledge concerning the interactions between DRT, learning and reward, examine the most impactful DRT side effects and provide suggestions for optimizing rehabilitation in PD.Item Open Access A novel fiber laser development for photoacoustic microscopy(SPIE, 2013) Yavaş, Seydi; Aytac-Kipergil, E.; Arabul, M.U.; Erkol H.; Akçaalan, Önder; Eldeniz, Y.B.; İlday, F. Ömer; Unlu, M.B.Photoacoustic microscopy, as an imaging modality, has shown promising results in imaging angiogenesis and cutaneous malignancies like melanoma, revealing systemic diseases including diabetes, hypertension, tracing drug efficiency and assessment of therapy, monitoring healing processes such as wound cicatrization, brain imaging and mapping. Clinically, photoacoustic microscopy is emerging as a capable diagnostic tool. Parameters of lasers used in photoacoustic microscopy, particularly, pulse duration, energy, pulse repetition frequency, and pulse-to-pulse stability affect signal amplitude and quality, data acquisition speed and indirectly, spatial resolution. Lasers used in photoacoustic microscopy are typically Q-switched lasers, low-power laser diodes, and recently, fiber lasers. Significantly, the key parameters cannot be adjusted independently of each other, whereas microvasculature and cellular imaging, e.g., have different requirements. Here, we report an integrated fiber laser system producing nanosecond pulses, covering the spectrum from 600 nm to 1100 nm, developed specifically for photoacoustic excitation. The system comprises of Yb-doped fiber oscillator and amplifier, an acousto-optic modulator and a photonic-crystal fiber to generate supercontinuum. Complete control over the pulse train, including generation of non-uniform pulse trains, is achieved via the AOM through custom-developed field-programmable gate-array electronics. The system is unique in that all the important parameters are adjustable: pulse duration in the range of 1-3 ns, pulse energy up to 10 μJ, repetition rate from 50 kHz to 3 MHz. Different photocoustic imaging probes can be excited with the ultrabroad spectrum. The entire system is fiber-integrated; guided-beam-propagation rendersit misalignment free and largely immune to mechanical perturbations. The laser is robust, low-cost and built using readily available components. © 2013 Copyright SPIE.Item Open Access Real-time and selective detection of single nucleotide DNA mutations using surface engineered microtoroids(American Chemical Society, 2015) Toren, P.; Ozgur E.; Bayındır, MehmetMictoroids, as optical biosensors, can provide beneficial biosensing platforms to understand DNA alterations. These alterations could have significant clinical importance, such as the case of Pseudomonas aeruginosa, which is a commonly found pathogen in Cystic Fibrosis (CF) patients-causing poor prognosis by undergoing mutations during disease steps, gaining virulence and drug resistance. To provide a preliminary diagnosis platform for early-stage bacterial mutations, biosensing with a selective microtoroid surface was suggested. For this purpose, microtoroids with high quality factors were fabricated. The microtoroid surfaces were coated with (3-aminopropyl) triethoxysilane (APTES)/trimethylmethoxysilane (TMMS) mixed silane solution followed by EDC/NHS chemistry for covalent conjugation of DNA probes. Ethanolamine capping was applied to avoid unspecific interactions. The confocal studies confirmed homogeneous functionalization of the microtoroid surface. The DNA hybridization was demonstrated to be affected from the probe length. The optical biosensors showed a significant response (∼22 pm) to the complementary strand of the mutated type P. aeruginosa DNA, while showing substantially low and late response (∼5 pm) to the point mismatch strand. The limit of detection (LOD) for the complementary strand was calculated as 2.32 nM. No significant response was obtained for the noncomplementary strand. The results showed the microtoroids possessed selective surfaces in terms of distinguishing DNA alterations.