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1.
bioRxiv ; 2023 Jun 05.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37333419

ABSTRACT

Endovascular procedures provide surgeons and other interventionalists with minimally invasive methods to treat vascular diseases by passing guidewires, catheters, sheaths and treatment devices into the vasculature to and navigate toward a treatment site. The efficiency of this navigation affects patient outcomes, but is frequently compromised by catheter "herniation", in which the catheter-guidewire system bulges out from the intended endovascular pathway so that the interventionalist can no longer advance it. Here, we showed herniation to be a bifurcation phenomenon that can be predicted and controlled using mechanical characterizations of catheter-guidewire systems and patientspecific clinical imaging. We demonstrated our approach in laboratory models and, retrospectively, in patients who underwent procedures involving transradial neurovascular procedures with an endovascular pathway from the wrist, up in the arm, around the aortic arch, and into the neurovasculature. Our analyses identified a mathematical navigation stability criterion that predicted herniation in all of these settings. Results show that herniation can be predicted through bifurcation analysis, and provide a framework for selecting catheter-guidewire systems to avoid herniation in specific patient anatomy.

2.
J Clin Virol Plus ; 3(1): 100135, 2023 Feb.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36644774

ABSTRACT

Objective: Lateral flow assays (LFA) are sensitive for detecting antibodies to SARS-CoV-2 proteins within weeks after infection. This study tested samples from immunocompetent adults, and those receiving treatments for chronic inflammatory diseases (CID), before and after mRNA SARS-CoV-2 vaccination. Methods: We compared results obtained with the COVIBLOCK Covid-19 LFA to those obtained by anti-spike (S) ELISA. Results: The LFA detected anti-S antibodies in 29 of 29 (100%) of the immunocompetent and 110 of 126 (87.3%) of the CID participants after vaccination. Semiquantitative LFA scores were statistically significantly lower in samples from immunosuppressed participants, and were significantly correlated with anti-S antibody levels measured by ELISA. Conclusions: This simple LFA test is a practical alternative to laboratory-based assays for detecting anti-S antibodies after infection or vaccination. This type of test may be most useful for testing people in outpatient or resource-limited settings.

3.
Commun Biol ; 5(1): 1128, 2022 10 25.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36284160

ABSTRACT

Most human genetic variation is classified as variants of uncertain significance. While advances in genome editing have allowed innovation in pooled screening platforms, many screens deal with relatively simple readouts (viability, fluorescence) and cannot identify the complex cellular phenotypes that underlie most human diseases. In this paper, we present a generalizable functional genomics platform that combines high-content imaging, machine learning, and microraft isolation in a method termed "Raft-Seq". We highlight the efficacy of our platform by showing its ability to distinguish pathogenic point mutations of the mitochondrial regulator Mitofusin 2, even when the cellular phenotype is subtle. We also show that our platform achieves its efficacy using multiple cellular features, which can be configured on-the-fly. Raft-Seq enables a way to perform pooled screening on sets of mutations in biologically relevant cells, with the ability to physically capture any cell with a perturbed phenotype and expand it clonally, directly from the primary screen.


Subject(s)
Gene Editing , Genomics , Humans , Mutation , Genomics/methods , Phenotype , Mitochondria/genetics
4.
J Mech Behav Biomed Mater ; 119: 104459, 2021 07.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-33887627

ABSTRACT

Endovascular catheter-based technologies have revolutionized the treatment of complex vascular pathology. Catheters and endovascular devices that can be maneuvered through tortuous arterial anatomy have enabled minimally invasive treatment in the peripheral arterial system. Although mechanical factors drive an interventionalist's choice of catheters and sheaths, these decisions are mostly made qualitative and based on personal experience and procedural pattern recognition. However, a definitive quantitative characterization of endovascular tools that are best suited for specific peripheral arterial beds is currently lacking. To establish a foundation for quantitative tool selection in the neurovascular and lower extremity peripheral arterial beds, we developed a nonlinear beam theory method to quantify catheter and sheath flexural rigidity. We applied this assessment to a sampling of commonly utilized commercially available peripheral arterial catheters and sheaths. Our results demonstrated that catheters and sheaths adopted for existing practice patterns to treat peripheral arterial disease in the lower extremities and neurovascular system have different but overlapping ranges of flexural rigidities that were not sensitive to luminal diameters within each procedure type. Our approach provides an accurate and effective method for characterization of flexural rigidity properties of catheters and sheaths, and a foundation for developing future technologies tailored for specific peripheral arterial systems.


Subject(s)
Catheters , Endovascular Procedures , Catheters, Indwelling , Lower Extremity
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