Gas Transport in Serpentine Microporous Tubes Under Steady and Pulsatile Blood Flow Conditions

1991 ◽  
Vol 113 (2) ◽  
pp. 223-229 ◽  
Author(s):  
Kazuo Tanishita ◽  
Masanobu Ujihira ◽  
Akihisa Watabe ◽  
Kunio Nakano ◽  
Peter D. Richardson ◽  
...  

A serpentine gas exchange unit was built with cylindrical tubular microporous membranes featuring periodic arcs with a fixed curvature ratio (ratio of tube radius to radius of curvature) of 1/14 and circular angles between 30 and 360 deg. Oxygen transfer was measured under steady and pulsatile blood flow conditions in vitro and ex vivo to assess the design features which most effectively augment gas transfer. Under steady blood flow conditions, oxygen transfer increased with circular angles beyond 70 deg. Under pulsatile conditions, a wide range of geometrical and fluid mechanical parameters could be combined to enhance gas transfer performance, which eventually depended upon the secondary Reynolds number and the Womersley parameter.

Author(s):  
Scott C. Corbett ◽  
Ahmet U. Coskun ◽  
Hamid N-Hashemi

Implantable devices in direct contact with flowing blood are currently being used to treat many medical conditions; however, thromboembolism, blood damage and the attendant risk for ischemic stroke remains a major impediment. Specifically, vascular access methods, performed by the insertion of cannulae into vessels, may give rise to non-physiological pressure variations and shear stresses. To date, the hydrodynamic behavior of cannulae has been evaluated by comparing their pressure loss-flow rate relationships, as obtained from in vitro experiments. Numerical studies have evaluated cannulae as rigid wall vessels with steady flow conditions [1]. Various catheter tip styles have been compared [2], and the fluid dynamics of arterial cannulae inserted in the aortic arch have been investigated [3]. Evaluation of shear stresses within a flexible wall cannula under pulsatile blood flow conditions is discussed herein. We anticipate that considerations for pulsating blood flow and flexible device walls will indicate that anticoagulation requirements can be minimized and device related complications can be decreased, thus increasing patient survival rates.


Stroke ◽  
2020 ◽  
Vol 51 (Suppl_1) ◽  
Author(s):  
Yedan Liu ◽  
Shaoxun Wang ◽  
Ya Guo ◽  
Huawei Zhang ◽  
Richard Roman ◽  
...  

Diabetes is the primary pathological factor attributed to Alzheimer’s disease and vascular cognitive impairment. Previous studies demonstrated that hyperglycemia promoted oxidative stress in the cerebral vasculature. Cerebrovascular pericytes contribute to maintaining blood-brain barrier (BBB) integrity and regulating cerebral blood flow (CBF). However, whether hyperglycemia diminishes the contractile capability of pericytes, impairs CBF autoregulation and increases BBB permeability are unclear. In the present study, we examined the role of pericytes in cerebrovascular function and cognition in diabetes using cell culture in vitro , isolated penetrating arterioles ex vivo and CBF autoregulation in vivo . Reactive oxygen species were elevated in high glucose (HG, 30 mM) treated vs. normal glucose (NG, 5.5 mM) treated pericytes. Further, mitochondrial superoxide production was increased in HG-treated vs. NG-treated group (13.24 ± 1.01 arbitrary unit (a.u.)/30min vs. 6.98 ± 0.36 a.u./30min). Mitochondrial respiration decreased in HG-treated vs. NG-treated pericytes (3718 ± 185.9 pmol/min/mg, n=10 vs. 4742 ± 284.5 pmol/min/mg, n=10) as measured by a Seahorse XFe24 analyzer. HG-treated pericytes displayed fragmented mitochondria in association with increased fission protein (DRP1) and decreased fusion protein (OPA1) expression. HG-treated pericytes displayed lower contractile capability than NG-treated cells (20.23 ± 7.15% vs. 29.46 ± 9.41%). The myogenic response was impaired in penetrating arterioles isolated from diabetic rats in comparison with non-diabetic rats. Autoregulation of CBF measured by a laser Doppler flowmeter was impaired in diabetic rats compared with non-diabetic rats. Diabetic rats exhibited greater BBB leakage than control rats. The cognitive function was examined using an eight-arm water maze. Diabetic rats took longer time to escape than the non-diabetic rats indicating learning and memory deficits. In conclusion, hyperglycemia induces pericyte dysfunction by altering mitochondrial dynamics and diminishing contractile capability, which promotes BBB leakage, decreases CBF autoregulation and contributes to diabetes-related dementia.


2022 ◽  
Author(s):  
Homa Majd ◽  
Ryan M Samuel ◽  
Jonathan T Ramirez ◽  
Ali Kalantari ◽  
Kevin Barber ◽  
...  

The enteric nervous system (ENS) plays a central role in gut physiology and mediating the crosstalk between the gastrointestinal (GI) tract and other organs. The human ENS has remained elusive, highlighting the need for an in vitro modeling and mapping blueprint. Here we map out the developmental and functional features of the human ENS, by establishing robust and scalable 2D ENS cultures and 3D enteric ganglioids from human pluripotent stem cells (hPSCs). These models recapitulate the remarkable neuronal and glial diversity found in primary tissue and enable comprehensive molecular analyses that uncover functional and developmental relationships within these lineages. As a salient example of the power of this system, we performed in-depth characterization of enteric nitrergic neurons (NO neurons) which are implicated in a wide range of GI motility disorders. We conducted an unbiased screen and identified drug candidates that modulate the activity of NO neurons and demonstrated their potential in promoting motility in mouse colonic tissue ex vivo. We established a high-throughput strategy to define the developmental programs involved in NO neuron specification and discovered that PDGFR inhibition boosts the induction of NO neurons in enteric ganglioids. Transplantation of these ganglioids in the colon of NO neuron-deficient mice results in extensive tissue engraftment, providing a xenograft model for the study of human ENS in vivo and the development of cell-based therapies for neurodegenerative GI disorders. These studies provide a framework for deciphering fundamental features of the human ENS and designing effective strategies to treat enteric neuropathies.  


2020 ◽  
Vol 11 (1) ◽  
Author(s):  
N. N. Parayath ◽  
S. B. Stephan ◽  
A. L. Koehne ◽  
P. S. Nelson ◽  
M. T. Stephan

AbstractEngineering chimeric antigen receptors (CAR) or T cell receptors (TCR) helps create disease-specific T cells for targeted therapy, but the cost and rigor associated with manufacturing engineered T cells ex vivo can be prohibitive, so programing T cells in vivo may be a viable alternative. Here we report an injectable nanocarrier that delivers in vitro-transcribed (IVT) CAR or TCR mRNA for transiently reprograming of circulating T cells to recognize disease-relevant antigens. In mouse models of human leukemia, prostate cancer and hepatitis B-induced hepatocellular carcinoma, repeated infusions of these polymer nanocarriers induce sufficient host T cells expressing tumor-specific CARs or virus-specific TCRs to cause disease regression at levels similar to bolus infusions of ex vivo engineered lymphocytes. Given their ease of manufacturing, distribution and administration, these nanocarriers, and the associated platforms, could become a therapeutic for a wide range of diseases.


Blood ◽  
2012 ◽  
Vol 120 (21) ◽  
pp. 3238-3238
Author(s):  
WHITE Jennell ◽  
Moira M. Lancelot ◽  
Patrick Hines ◽  
Sharada A. Sarnaik

Abstract Abstract 3238 Introduction: Sickle cell disease (SCD) is characterized by microvascular occlusion mediated in part by adhesion of sickle erythrocytes (SS RBCs) to the vasculature. Advanced flow adhesion (FA) technology facilitates SS RBC adhesion studies in conditions that simulate in vivo microvascular physiology. Most currently available FA systems measure SS RBC adhesion in non-pulsatile flow conditions, versus pulsatile blood flow conditions generated by the cardiac cycle. The influence of pulsatile blood flow on SS RBC adhesion may be particularly important in pediatric SS RBC adhesion, as children have a broad range of heart rates. This study compares SS RBC adhesion in non-pulsatile and pulsatile flow conditions, utilizing a commercially available, microfluidic FA system. Methods: Peripheral blood was obtained from patients with homozygous SCD (n=7) in steady state (5–18 years) from the Sickle Cell Center at the Children's Hospital of Michigan. FA assays were performed in non-pulsatile and pulsatile flow conditions, at a shear stress of 1.0 dyne/cm2, and increasing shear stress up to 20 dyne/cm2to assess avidity. A programmable control unit regulated pulse frequency, shear stress, and temperature. Adhesion was measured to immobilized human laminin and vascular cell adhesion molecule-1 (VCAM-1). A static adhesion assay was used to assess initrinsic adhesive properties of SS RBCs independent of flow dynamics. Results: Standard assays were performed with 30 mL of isolated SS RBCs (1× 107 cells/mL), and SS RBC adhesion was comparable to levels previously reported in parallel plate flow adhesion assays. FA assays showed that adhesion to both laminin and VCAM-1 was significantly increased in the context of pulsatile blood flow (1.67Hz) compared to non-pulsatile blood flow by 8-fold and 56-fold, respectively. The relationship of SS RBC adhesion to increasing pulse frequencies was variable from patient to patient, although adhesion to both laminin and VCAM-1 was uniformly greater in all pulse frequencies tested (1.0, 1.5, 1.67, and 2.0 Hz) compared to non-pulsatile blood flow. When avidity of adhesion was tested 78% of SS RBCs remained adhered to VCAM-1 at the maximum 20dyne/cm2 shear stress, whereas 6% of SS RBCs remained adhered to laminin at a shear stress of 20 dynes/cm2. Pulsatile adhesion to VCAM-1 and laminin was unaffected by protein kinase A (PKA) inhibition, although adhesion to laminin decreased by 31% in one of three patients. To determine if increased adhesion under pulse-flow conditions was due to increased contact time with the immobilized substrate versus a change in the SS RBC's intrinsic adhesive state, we measured SS RBC adhesion in a static adhesion assay following exposure to pulsatile versus non-pulsatile conditions. There was no significant difference in static adhesion to VCAM-1, however adhesion of pulse-exposed SS RBCs to laminin was more variable. Static adhesion of pulse-exposed SS RBCs to laminin was reduced by 60% in the presence of a PKA inhibitor. Conclusions: Our data demonstrate the application of a commercially available microfluidic flow adhesion assay system for efficient assessment of SS RBC adhesive properties. In the future, such advances may allow SS RBC adhesive properties to be evaluated clinically as a predictive tool for future vaso-occlusive events, and to predict individual patient response to anti-adhesive therapy. The small volume of blood required makes this system particularly attractive for studying pediatric samples. Additionally, our data demonstrate that adhesion to both an endothelial cell substrate (VCAM-1) and a subendothelial matrix substrate (laminin) is significantly influenced by the presence of pulsatile blood flow. Although PKA may play a minor role in pulsatile adhesion to laminin, increased contact time with immobilized laminin and VCAM-1 may be a greater contributor to increased adhesion under pulsatile conditions versus non-pulsatile conditions. Pediatric SS RBCs adhered to VCAM at higher levels and with more avidity compared to laminin. The pulsatile flow conditions described in this study more closely approximate in vivo microvascular conditions compared to non-pulsatile conditions commonly used to study SS RBC adhesion. Based on these differences in adhesion under pulsatile versus non-pulsatile flow, incorporating pulsatile flow in future adhesion studies may be more representative of in vivo conditions. Disclosures: No relevant conflicts of interest to declare.


2015 ◽  
Vol 2015 ◽  
pp. 1-15 ◽  
Author(s):  
Kazuko Kobayashi ◽  
Takanori Sasaki ◽  
Fumiaki Takenaka ◽  
Hiromasa Yakushiji ◽  
Yoshihiro Fujii ◽  
...  

Mesothelin (MSLN) is a 40-kDa cell differentiation-associated glycoprotein appearing with carcinogenesis and is highly expressed in many human cancers, including the majority of pancreatic adenocarcinomas, ovarian cancers, and mesotheliomas, while its expression in normal tissue is limited to mesothelial cells lining the pleura, pericardium, and peritoneum. Clone 11-25 is a murine hybridoma secreting monoclonal antibody (mAb) against human MSLN. In this study, we applied the 11-25 mAb toin vivoimaging to detect MSLN-expressing tumors. Inin vitroandex vivoimmunochemical studies, we demonstrated specificity of 11-25 mAb to membranous MSLN expressed on several pancreatic cancer cells. We showed the accumulation of Alexa Fluor 750-labeled 11-25 mAb in MSLN-expressing tumor xenografts in athymic nude mice. Then, 11-25 mAb was labeled with64Cu via a chelating agent DOTA and was used in bothin vitrocell binding assay andin vivopositron emission tomography (PET) imaging in the tumor-bearing mice. We confirmed that64Cu-labeled 11-25 mAb highly accumulated in MSLN-expressing tumors as compared to MSLN-negative ones. The64Cu-labeled 11-25 mAb is potentially useful as a PET probe capable of being used for wide range of tumors, rather than18F-FDG that occasionally provides nonspecific accumulation into the inflammatory lesions.


Soft Matter ◽  
2014 ◽  
Vol 10 (24) ◽  
pp. 4258-4267 ◽  
Author(s):  
Dmitry A. Fedosov ◽  
Matti Peltomäki ◽  
Gerhard Gompper

The behavior of red blood cells (RBCs) in microvessels plays an important role in blood flow resistance and in the cell partitioning within a microcirculatory network. We employ mesoscopic hydrodynamic simulations to study the behavior and deformation of single RBCs in microchannels yielding the construction of diagrams of RBC shapes for a wide range of flow conditions.


Author(s):  
Xin Zhang ◽  
Miao Li ◽  
Layla El Moussawi ◽  
Sally Saab ◽  
Shasha Zhang ◽  
...  

Humoral immune responses in animals are often tightly controlled by regulated proteolysis. This proteolysis is exerted by extracellular protease cascades, whose activation culminates in the proteolytic cleavage of key immune proteins and enzymes. A model for such immune system regulation is the melanization reaction in insects, where the activation of prophenoxidase (proPO) leads to the rapid formation of eumelanin on the surface of foreign entities such as parasites, bacteria and fungi. ProPO activation is tightly regulated by a network of so-called clip domain serine proteases, their proteolytically inactive homologs, and their serpin inhibitors. In Anopheles gambiae, the major malaria vector in sub-Saharan Africa, manipulation of this protease network affects resistance to a wide range of microorganisms, as well as host survival. However, thus far, our understanding of the molecular make-up and regulation of the protease network in mosquitoes is limited. Here, we report the function of the clip domain serine protease CLIPB10 in this network, using a combination of genetic and biochemical assays. CLIPB10 knockdown partially reversed melanotic tumor formation induced by Serpin 2 silencing in the absence of infection. CLIPB10 was also partially required for the melanization of ookinete stages of the rodent malaria parasite Plasmodium berghei in a refractory mosquito genetic background. Recombinant serpin 2 protein, a key inhibitor of the proPO activation cascade in An. gambiae, formed a SDS-stable protein complex with activated recombinant CLIPB10, and efficiently inhibited CLIPB10 activity in vitro at a stoichiometry of 1.89:1. Recombinant activated CLIPB10 increased PO activity in Manduca sexta hemolymph ex vivo, and directly activated purified M. sexta proPO in vitro. Taken together, these data identify CLIPB10 as the second protease with prophenoloxidase-activating function in An. gambiae, in addition to the previously described CLIPB9, suggesting functional redundancy in the protease network that controls melanization. In addition, our data suggest that tissue melanization and humoral melanization of parasites are at least partially mediated by the same proteases.


1998 ◽  
Vol 21 (9) ◽  
pp. 535-541 ◽  
Author(s):  
G.B. Fiore ◽  
G. Pennati ◽  
F. Inzoli ◽  
F. Mastrantonio ◽  
D. Galavotti

The clinical advantages achievable through pulsatile blood perfusion during cardio-pulmonary bypass have recently suggested the design of new pulsatile systems for extracorporeal circulation. Still it is not clear whether current commercial membrane oxygenators could be adopted with such systems, since their behaviour with pulsatile perfusion has not been satisfactorily documented yet. In a previous paper, we assessed that pulsatile perfusion of a widely used hollow fibre oxygenator (Sorin® Monolyth) at 60 bpm provides more time-consistent oxygen transfer than steady perfusion. The present work is aimed to evaluate how the pulse frequency influences the gas transfer performance of the same device. The oxygenator was subjected to in vitro trials using a roller pump with pulsatile module (Stöckert Instrumente®) to generate pulsed flow. Four different pulse frequencies (45, 60, 75 and 90 bpm) were investigated at a fixed blood flow rate (4.0 l/min). The experiments lasting six hours were carried out using bovine blood with inlet conditions according to AAMI standards requirements. Blood samples were withdrawn every hour and O2 and CO2 transfer rates were evaluated. The experimental findings confirm that with pulsatile blood flow no time decay take place during prolonged perfusion. Moreover, when pulse frequency increases, transition levels occur for both O2 and CO2. Over these thresholds gas transfer rates display significant increases (p < 0.05), though of little magnitude (up to 2.5% for oxygen over 60 bpm; up to 3.7% for carbon dioxide over 75 bpm).


2000 ◽  
Vol 83 (02) ◽  
pp. 217-223 ◽  
Author(s):  
Jens Agneskirchner ◽  
Patrick Bode ◽  
Michael Spannagl ◽  
Laurenz Wurzinger ◽  
Armin Reininger

SummaryThe c7E3 Fab reduces ischemic complications in patients undergoing high-risk coronary angioplasty or atherectomy. The present study investigated how c7E3 Fab inhibition of the platelet receptor glycoprotein IIb/IIIa and the endothelial vitronectin receptor affected platelet adhesion to endothelium and surface adsorbed fibrinogen under flow conditions.Platelet adhesion was examined using a stagnation point flow device with shear stress and shear rates up to 2.2 dynes/cm2 and 170 s−1, respectively. Ex vivo adhesion was compared between two groups of patients with acute myocardial infarction (AMI) treated with angioplasty and stent implantation and a group of healthy controls. Only one AMI group received c7E3 Fab therapy. Patients in both groups were administered acetyl salicylic acid (ASA) and heparin. In AMI patients c7E3 Fab reduced platelet adhesion to adsorbed fibrinogen by 79% compared to AMI patients without c7E3 Fab treatment and by 74% compared to healthy controls. Thirty hours after termination of c7E3 Fab infusion adhesion had slightly recovered with an inhibition of 61% and 52% still present, respectively. Additionally, in vitro platelet adhesion to intact endothelium and to adsorbed fibrinogen was measured during superfusion with ADP stimulated platelet rich plasma of healthy controls to which c7E3 Fab was added at a final concentration fc of 20 µg/ml. In spite of ADP stimulation c7E3 Fab completely blocked platelet adhesion to adsorbed fibrinogen and, moreover, to intact endothelium. Preincubation of endothelial cells with c7E3 (fc = 20 µg/ml) blocked adhesion of ADP-stimulated platelets by approximately 50%.Apart from the inhibition of platelet aggregation, c7E3 Fab added in vitro and given therapeutically in patients effectively blocks platelet adhesion to components of the injured as well as intact vessel wall under stagnation point flow conditions.


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