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1.
J Med Life ; 16(7): 1098-1104, 2023 Jul.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37900068

ABSTRACT

This study aimed to investigate the effectiveness of combined negative pressure wound therapy (NPWT) and human amniotic membrane in patients with chronic wounds associated with diabetes. A total of five patients with type 2 diabetes, including ischemic and mixed forms of diabetic foot syndrome, presenting with ischemic wounds of the lower extremities were included in this study. Patients with uncorrected limb ischemia were excluded. The treatment protocol included diabetes compensation (treatment with fractional insulin therapy), anticoagulant, metabolic therapy and angiotropic therapy, physical treatment methods, osteoporosis therapy with calcium preparations, and wound-specific interventions. The primary treatment approach involved the application of a vacuum bandage to the transplanted human amniotic membrane, which improved the adaptation of the flap to the wound surface, allowed the removal of excess wound exudate, and stimulated angiogenesis and reparative properties. The combined approach of NPWT and biotherapy was a safe and effective cure for diabetic wounds, promoting faster wound healing, reducing the need for autodermoplasty, and possibly reducing the necessity for high-level amputations.


Subject(s)
Diabetes Mellitus, Type 2 , Diabetic Foot , Negative-Pressure Wound Therapy , Humans , Diabetes Mellitus, Type 2/complications , Diabetic Foot/surgery , Wound Healing , Amputation, Surgical , Cell- and Tissue-Based Therapy , Negative-Pressure Wound Therapy/methods
2.
J Med Life ; 15(1): 65-70, 2022 Jan.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-35186138

ABSTRACT

This study investigates the response of bone marrow (particularly megakaryocytes) in mice under the influence of diclofenac sodium for 10 days using intraperitoneal injection at various doses. A fundamentally new immunomagnetic separation method was applied during the experiment, which helped obtain pure lines of bone marrow cells, particularly megakaryocytes (MC), without admixtures of other cells or their particles. The resulting cells completely retain their structure and can be used in further research. The study determined that different doses of diclofenac sodium have different effects on different groups of diabetes mellitus cells CD34-megakaryocytes. The use of 1.0 mg/ml sharply negatively affects the state of early populations of megakaryocytes (decrease by 80%, p=0.05), a dose of 0.025 mg/ml had the least effect on this population of cells (22.8%, p=0.05). The greatest number of average forms of diabetes mellitus 34 was observed when using a dose of 0.95 mg/ml (22.8%, p=0.05), with a gradual decrease in the dose, the indicator of this group of cells decreased. A dose of 0.03 mg/ml did not affect the quantitative state of megakaryocytes, and a dose of 0.025 mg/ml caused a slight decrease (16.6%, p=0.05). Indicators of mature cells of megakaryocytes CD 34- decreased in all studied groups, however, their maximum value reached a maximum decrease by 0.25 mg/ml (55.2%, p=0.05), the dose of diclofenac sodium 0.03 mg/ml, lower (18.4%, p=0.05). Diclofenac sodium in different doses has different effects on the degree of differentiation of CD 34-. Its introduction positively affects the state of intermediate forms of megakaryocytes, except for minimal doses, while the effect on early and mature forms in all cases turned out to be negative.


Subject(s)
Diclofenac , Megakaryocytes , Animals , Bone Marrow Cells , Cell Separation/methods , Diclofenac/toxicity , Magnetic Phenomena , Mice
3.
Opt Express ; 29(12): 19113-19119, 2021 Jun 07.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-34154152

ABSTRACT

Photonic system component counts are increasing rapidly, particularly in CMOS-compatible silicon photonics processes. Large numbers of cascaded active photonic devices are difficult to implement when accounting for constraints on area, power dissipation, and response time. Plasma dispersion and the thermo-optic effect, both available in CMOS-compatible silicon processes, address a subset of these criteria. With the addition of a few back-end-of-line etch processing steps, silicon photonics platforms can support nano-opto-electro-mechanical (NOEM) phase shifters. Realizing NOEM phase shifters that operate at CMOS-compatible voltages (≤ 1.2 V) and with low insertion loss remains a challenge. Here, we introduce a novel NOEM phase shifter fabricated alongside 90 nanometer transistors that imparts 5.63 radians phase shift at 1.08 volts bias over an actuation length of 25µm with an insertion loss of less than 0.04 dB and 3 dB bandwidth of 0.26 MHz.

4.
J Med Life ; 13(3): 371-377, 2020.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-33072210

ABSTRACT

The study of the incidence of cryoglobulinemia is relevant in patients with an intestinal anastomotic leak. This study aims to determine a laboratory marker of the risk of small intestine anastomotic leak. The study was based on 96 patients who were subjected to resections of segments of the small intestine with the formation of intestinal anastomoses at the State Institution "Zaytsev V.T. Institute of General and Urgent Surgery of National Academy of Medical Sciences of Ukraine". Of all the operated patients, there were 55.2% women and 44.8% men. Of the 96 patients examined, cryoglobulinemia was detected in the majority - 62.5% of patients, of which 4 were later proved to have inactive hepatitis C; the remaining 38.5% had no cryoglobulinemia. According to the existing theory of the autoimmune mechanism of postoperative surgical complications formation, the revealed decrease in the level of cryoglobulins on the second day could be related to their fixation in the microcirculatory bed and the development of immunocomplex inflammation. While the increase in the content of cryoglobulins in serum on the third day can be caused by their entry into the circulatory bed from deposition or fixation sites and the development of a secondary immune response. In patients with intestinal anastomosis failure after resection of intestinal segments, cryoglobulinemia rates increased more than 80 mg/l; this indicator could be used as a marker of postoperative complications.


Subject(s)
Cryoglobulins/analysis , Digestive System Surgical Procedures , Intestine, Small/surgery , Anastomosis, Surgical/adverse effects , Cryoglobulinemia/blood , Cryoglobulinemia/immunology , Female , Humans , Immunoglobulins/blood , Lymphocytes/metabolism , Male , Middle Aged , Phagocytosis , Ukraine
5.
Nat Commun ; 11(1): 3663, 2020 Jul 21.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-32694591

ABSTRACT

Polaritons - coupled excitations of photons and dipolar matter excitations - can propagate along anisotropic metasurfaces with either hyperbolic or elliptical dispersion. At the transition from hyperbolic to elliptical dispersion (corresponding to a topological transition), various intriguing phenomena are found, such as an enhancement of the photonic density of states, polariton canalization and hyperlensing. Here, we investigate theoretically and experimentally the topological transition, the polaritonic coupling and the strong nonlocal response in a uniaxial infrared-phononic metasurface, a grating of hexagonal boron nitride (hBN) nanoribbons. By hyperspectral infrared nanoimaging, we observe a synthetic transverse optical phonon resonance (strong collective near-field coupling of the nanoribbons) in the middle of the hBN Reststrahlen band, yielding a topological transition from hyperbolic to elliptical dispersion. We further visualize and characterize the spatial evolution of a deeply subwavelength canalization mode near the transition frequency, which is a collimated polariton that is the basis for hyperlensing and diffraction-less propagation.

6.
Nano Lett ; 18(8): 5205-5210, 2018 08 08.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-30005161

ABSTRACT

Imaging materials and inner structures with resolution below the diffraction limit has become of fundamental importance in recent years for a wide variety of applications. We report subdiffractive internal structure diagnosis of hexagonal boron nitride by exciting and imaging hyperbolic phonon polaritons. On the basis of their unique propagation properties, we are able to accurately locate defects in the crystal interior with nanometer resolution. The precise location, size, and geometry of the concealed defects are reconstructed by analyzing the polariton wavelength, reflection coefficient, and their dispersion. We have also studied the evolution of polariton reflection, transmission, and scattering as a function of defect size and photon frequency. The nondestructive high-precision polaritonic structure diagnosis technique introduced here can be also applied to other hyperbolic or waveguide systems and may be deployed in the next-generation biomedical imaging, sensing, and fine structure analysis.


Subject(s)
Boron Compounds/chemistry , Nanostructures/chemistry , Phonons , Computer Simulation , Molecular Structure , Particle Size
7.
Adv Mater ; 30(16): e1706358, 2018 Apr.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-29532960

ABSTRACT

Hexagonal boron nitride (hBN) is a natural hyperbolic material that supports both volume-confined hyperbolic polaritons and sidewall-confined hyperbolic surface polaritons (HSPs). In this work, efficient excitation, control, and steering of HSPs are demonstrated in hBN through engineering the geometry and orientation of hBN sidewalls. By combining infrared nanoimaging and numerical simulations, the reflection, transmission, and scattering of HSPs are investigated at the hBN corners with various apex angles. It is also shown that the sidewall-confined nature of HSPs enables a high degree of control over their propagation by designing the geometry of hBN nanostructures.

8.
Nat Commun ; 8(1): 795, 2017 10 06.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-28986530

ABSTRACT

Recent research has explored the spatiotemporal modulation of permittivity to break Lorentz reciprocity in a manner compatible with integrated-circuit fabrication. However, permittivity modulation is inherently weak and accompanied by loss due to carrier injection, particularly at higher frequencies, resulting in large insertion loss, size, and/or narrow operation bandwidths. Here, we show that the presence of absorption in an integrated electronic circuit may be counter-intuitively used to our advantage to realize a new generation of magnet-free non-reciprocal components. We exploit the fact that conductivity in semiconductors provides a modulation index several orders of magnitude larger than permittivity. While directly associated with loss in static systems, we show that properly synchronized conductivity modulation enables loss-free, compact and extremely broadband non-reciprocity. We apply these concepts to obtain a wide range of responses, from isolation to gyration and circulation, and verify our findings by realizing a millimeter-wave (25 GHz) circulator fully integrated in complementary metal-oxide-semiconductor technology.Optical non-reciprocity achieved through refractive index modulation can have its challenges and limitations. Here, Dinc et al. introduce the concept of non-reciprocity based on synchronized spatio-temporal modulation of conductivity to achieve different types of non-reciprocal functionality.

9.
Phys Rev Lett ; 115(20): 207403, 2015 Nov 13.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-26613471

ABSTRACT

We apply the Pancharatnam-Berry phase approach to plasmonic metasurfaces loaded by highly nonlinear multiquantum-well substrates, establishing a platform to control the nonlinear wave front at will based on giant localized nonlinear effects. We apply this approach to design flat nonlinear metasurfaces for efficient second-harmonic radiation, including beam steering, focusing, and polarization manipulation. Our findings open a new direction for nonlinear optics, in which phase matching issues are relaxed, and an unprecedented level of local wave front control is achieved over thin devices with giant nonlinear responses.

10.
Phys Rev Lett ; 114(23): 233901, 2015 Jun 12.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-26196803

ABSTRACT

We explore the unusual electromagnetic response of ultrathin anisotropic σ-near-zero uniaxial metasurfaces, demonstrating extreme topological transitions--from closed elliptical to open hyperbolic--for surface plasmon propagation, associated with a dramatic tailoring of the local density of states. The proposed metasurfaces may be implemented using nanostructured graphene monolayers and open unprecedented venues for extreme light confinement and unusual propagation and guidance, combined with large tunability via electric bias.

11.
Nano Lett ; 15(8): 5254-60, 2015 Aug 12.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-26161503

ABSTRACT

We report a low-cost, large-area fabrication process using solution-based nanoimprinting and compact ligand exchange of colloidal Au nanocrystals to define anisotropic, subwavelength, plasmonic nanoinclusions for optical metasurfaces. Rod-shaped, Au nanocrystal-based nanoantennas possess strong, localized, plasmonic resonances able to control polarization. We fabricate metasurfaces from rod-shaped nanoantennas tailored in size and spacing to demonstrate Au nanocrystal-based quarter-wave plates that operate with extreme bandwidths and provide high polarization conversion efficiencies in the near-to-mid infrared.


Subject(s)
Colloids/chemistry , Gold/chemistry , Nanoparticles/chemistry , Nanostructures/chemistry , Nanotechnology/methods , Anisotropy , Nanoparticles/ultrastructure , Nanostructures/ultrastructure , Surface Plasmon Resonance , Surface Properties
12.
Nature ; 511(7507): 65-9, 2014 Jul 03.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-24990746

ABSTRACT

Intersubband transitions in n-doped multi-quantum-well semiconductor heterostructures make it possible to engineer one of the largest known nonlinear optical responses in condensed matter systems--but this nonlinear response is limited to light with electric field polarized normal to the semiconductor layers. In a different context, plasmonic metasurfaces (thin conductor-dielectric composite materials) have been proposed as a way of strongly enhancing light-matter interaction and realizing ultrathin planarized devices with exotic wave properties. Here we propose and experimentally realize metasurfaces with a record-high nonlinear response based on the coupling of electromagnetic modes in plasmonic metasurfaces with quantum-engineered electronic intersubband transitions in semiconductor heterostructures. We show that it is possible to engineer almost any element of the nonlinear susceptibility tensor of these structures, and we experimentally verify this concept by realizing a 400-nm-thick metasurface with nonlinear susceptibility of greater than 5 × 10(4) picometres per volt for second harmonic generation at a wavelength of about 8 micrometres under normal incidence. This susceptibility is many orders of magnitude larger than any second-order nonlinear response in optical metasurfaces measured so far. The proposed structures can act as ultrathin highly nonlinear optical elements that enable efficient frequency mixing with relaxed phase-matching conditions, ideal for realizing broadband frequency up- and down-conversions, phase conjugation and all-optical control and tunability over a surface.

13.
ACS Nano ; 7(11): 9780-7, 2013 Nov 26.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-24079266

ABSTRACT

A single graphene sheet, when subjected to a perpendicular static magnetic field, provides a Faraday rotation that, per atomic layer, greatly surpasses that of any other known material. In continuous graphene, Faraday rotation originates from the cyclotron resonance of massless carriers, which allows dynamical tuning through either external electrostatic or magneto-static setting. Furthermore, the rotation direction can be controlled by changing the sign of the carriers in graphene, which can be done by means of an external electric field. However, despite these tuning possibilities, the requirement of large magnetic fields hinders the application of the Faraday effect in real devices, especially for frequencies higher than a few terahertz. In this work we demonstrate that large Faraday rotation can be achieved in arrays of graphene microribbons, through the excitation of the magnetoplasmons of individual ribbons, at larger frequencies than those dictated by the cyclotron resonance. In this way, for a given magnetic field and chemical potential, structuring graphene periodically can produce large Faraday rotation at larger frequencies than what would occur in a continuous graphene sheet. Alternatively, at a given frequency, graphene ribbons produce large Faraday rotation at much smaller magnetic fields than in continuous graphene.

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