Curcumin-Microsphere/IR820 Hybrid Bifunctional Hydrogels for In Situ Osteosarcoma Chemo-co-Thermal Therapy and Bone Reconstruction

Author(s):  
Bowen Tan ◽  
Yanting Wu ◽  
Yongzhi Wu ◽  
Kun Shi ◽  
Ruxia Han ◽  
...  
2015 ◽  
Vol 119 ◽  
pp. 151-158 ◽  
Author(s):  
R. Dorati ◽  
C. Colonna ◽  
I. Genta ◽  
A. De Trizio ◽  
T. Modena ◽  
...  

Author(s):  
Willard Hanson ◽  
Najma Abdollahzadeh ◽  
Bumsoo Han

Thermal therapy, destroying tumor in situ by localized heating, is emerging as one of the treatment options for benign and localized tumors. Despite many advantages of thermal therapy, its clinical application is still limited due to the lack of a reliable intraoperative monitoring technique of the thermal lesion. To address this challenge, an intraoperative thermometry technique has been proposed using the temperature-dependent fluorescence of quantum dots (QDs). Its feasibility is recently demonstrated by monitoring the spatiotemporal temperature during gold nanoshell-mediated heating. In the present study, the effects of tissue-light interaction on the QD-mediated thermometry were investigated both experimentally and theoretically so that the technique can be extended to in vivo applications. As for experimental investigation, the QD fluorescence through tissue phantom was characterized with varying the thickness of the phantom over a temperature range relevant to thermal therapy. The results showed that the QD fluorescence through tissue phantom was still linearly correlated to the local temperature, but the slope of the correlations decreased with the phantom thickness. As for theoretical investigation, the radiative transfer equation was reduced to the diffusion approximation, and the QD fluorescence through tissue phantom was predicted by numerically solving the diffusion approximation. The results confirmed that the diffusion approximation could describe the tissue-light interaction for the QD-mediated thermometry but further research is still required to improve the accuracy of the prediction.


Author(s):  
Bumsoo Han ◽  
Willard L. Hanson ◽  
Karim Bensalah ◽  
Altug Tuncel ◽  
Joshua Stern ◽  
...  

Due to advances and routine use of various diagnostic technologies, tumors are increasingly detected at very early stages. Thus, there is growing interest in employing minimally invasive surgical techniques for the management of tumors. Many of these procedures are thermal therapies, in which localized thermal lesions, either hyperthermic or cryogenic, are created to destroy malignant tissue in situ. However, the major drawback to the widespread dissemination and acceptance of thermal therapy is the lack of a reliable real-time intraoperative monitoring technique of the thermal lesion.


1984 ◽  
Vol 75 ◽  
pp. 743-759 ◽  
Author(s):  
Kerry T. Nock

ABSTRACTA mission to rendezvous with the rings of Saturn is studied with regard to science rationale and instrumentation and engineering feasibility and design. Future detailedin situexploration of the rings of Saturn will require spacecraft systems with enormous propulsive capability. NASA is currently studying the critical technologies for just such a system, called Nuclear Electric Propulsion (NEP). Electric propulsion is the only technology which can effectively provide the required total impulse for this demanding mission. Furthermore, the power source must be nuclear because the solar energy reaching Saturn is only 1% of that at the Earth. An important aspect of this mission is the ability of the low thrust propulsion system to continuously boost the spacecraft above the ring plane as it spirals in toward Saturn, thus enabling scientific measurements of ring particles from only a few kilometers.


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