Tissue Imaging

related to imaging of tissues
Authors: 
Chunping Wu, Demian R. Ifa, Nicholas E. Manicke and R. Graham Cooks
Journal: 
Analyst
Year: 
2010
Funding: 
National Institutes of Health (1R21 EB009459-01)
Funding: 
Office of Naval Research (N00014-05-1-0405)
publication_user_reference: 
Authors: 
Nicholas E. Manicke, Marcela Nefliu, Chunping Wu, John W. Woods, Vladimir Reiser, Ronald C. Hendrickson, R. Graham Cooks
Journal: 
Analytical Chemistry
Year: 
2009
Volume: 
in press

One of the hallmarks of atherosclerosis is the accumulation of lipoproteins within the wall of blood vessels.  The lipid composition can vary among atheroma, even within a single individual, and is also dynamic, changing as the lesion progresses.  One desirable characteristic of atheroma is their stability, as the rupture of unstable plaques can interfere with normal blood flow to the brain or heart, leading to stroke or heart attack.

Funding: 
National Institutes of Health (1R21 EB009459-01)
publication_user_reference: 
Authors: 
Allison L. Dill, Livia S. Eberlin, Anthony B. Costa, Demian R. Ifa, Liang Cheng, Timothy Masterson, Michael Koch, R. Graham Cooks
Journal: 
Analytical Chemistry
Year: 
2009
Volume: 
submitted
publication_user_reference: 
Authors: 
Allison L. Dill, Demian R. Ifa, Nicholas E. Manicke, Anthony B. Costa, Jose A. Ramos Vara, Deborah W. Knapp, R. Graham Cooks
Journal: 
Analytical Chemistry
Year: 
2009
Volume: 
81
Page Number (starting): 
8758
Page Number (ending): 
8764
Funding: 
National Institutes of Health (1R21 EB009459-01)
Funding: 
Office of Naval Research (N00014-05-1-0454)
publication_user_reference: 
Authors: 
Chunping Wu, Demian R. Ifa, Nicholas E. Manicke, R. Graham Cooks
Journal: 
Analytical Chemistry
Year: 
2009
Volume: 
81
Page Number (starting): 
7618
Page Number (ending): 
7624
Funding: 
Office of Naval Research (N00014-05-1-0405)
publication_user_reference: 
Authors: 
Allison L. Dill, Demian R. Ifa, Nicholas E. Manicke, Zheng Ouyang, R. Graham Cooks
Journal: 
Journal of Chromatography B
Year: 
2009
Volume: 
877
Page Number (starting): 
2882
Page Number (ending): 
2889
Funding: 
National Science Foundation
Funding: 
NIH/NIGMS (5R01 GM58008-07)
Funding: 
Office of Naval Research
Funding: 
Prosalia, Inc.
publication_user_reference: 
Authors: 
Justin M. Wiseman, Demian R. Ifa, Yongxin Zhu, Candice B. Kissinger, Nicholas E. Manicke, Peter T. Kissinger and R. Graham Cooks
Journal: 
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences
Year: 
2008
Volume: 
105(47)
Page Number (starting): 
18120
Page Number (ending): 
18125

New ambient ionization methods for mass spectrometry are enabling direct, high throughput measurements of samples in the open air.  Here, we report on one such method, desorption electrospray ionization (DESI), which is coupled to a linear ion trap mass spectrometer and used to record the spatial intensity distributions of a drug and its metabolite directly from histological sections of brain, lung, kidney and testis tissue without prior chemical treatment.

Funding: 
Office of Naval Research (N00014-05-1-0454)
Funding: 
Prosolia 21st Century Fund
publication_user_reference: 
Authors: 
Justin M Wiseman, Demian R Ifa, Andre Venter, R Graham Cooks
Journal: 
Nature Protocols
Year: 
2008
Volume: 
3(3)
Page Number (starting): 
517
Page Number (ending): 
524

Desorption electrospray ionization (DESI) allows the direct analysis of ordinary objects or pre-processed samples under ambient conditions. Among other applications, DESI is used to identify and record spatial distributions of lipids and drug molecules in biological tissue sections. This technique does not require sample preparation other than production of microtome tissue slices and does not involve the use of ionization matrices. This greatly simplifies the procedure and prevents the redistribution of analytes during matrix deposition.

Funding: 
Office of Naval Research (N00014-05-1-0454)
publication_user_reference: 
Syndicate content