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Photoacoustic Imaging for Non-Invasive Assessment of Physiological Biomarkers of Intestinal Injury in Experimental Necrotizing Enterocolitis

BACKGROUND: Necrotizing enterocolitis (NEC) is an often-lethal disease of the premature infants’ intestinal tract that is exacerbated by significant difficulties in early and accurate diagnosis. In NEC disease, the intestine often exhibits hypoperfusion and dysmotility, which contributes to advanced...

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Autores principales: Weis, Jared A., Rauh, Jessica L., Ellison, Maryssa A., Cruz-Diaz, Nildris, Yamaleyeva, Liliya M., Welch, Cherrie D., Zeller, Kristen A., Weis, Victoria G.
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory 2023
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10634697/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/37961632
http://dx.doi.org/10.1101/2023.10.20.563296
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author Weis, Jared A.
Rauh, Jessica L.
Ellison, Maryssa A.
Cruz-Diaz, Nildris
Yamaleyeva, Liliya M.
Welch, Cherrie D.
Zeller, Kristen A.
Weis, Victoria G.
author_facet Weis, Jared A.
Rauh, Jessica L.
Ellison, Maryssa A.
Cruz-Diaz, Nildris
Yamaleyeva, Liliya M.
Welch, Cherrie D.
Zeller, Kristen A.
Weis, Victoria G.
author_sort Weis, Jared A.
collection PubMed
description BACKGROUND: Necrotizing enterocolitis (NEC) is an often-lethal disease of the premature infants’ intestinal tract that is exacerbated by significant difficulties in early and accurate diagnosis. In NEC disease, the intestine often exhibits hypoperfusion and dysmotility, which contributes to advanced disease pathogenesis. However, these physiological features cannot be accurately and quantitively assessed within the current constraints of imaging modalities frequently used in the clinic (plain film X-ray and ultrasound). We have previously demonstrated the ability of photoacoustic imaging (PAI) to non-invasively and quantitively assess intestinal tissue oxygenation and motility in a healthy neonatal rat model. As a first-in-disease application, we evaluated NEC pathogenesis using PAI to assess intestinal health biomarkers in a preclinical neonatal rat experimental model of NEC. METHODS: NEC was induced in neonatal rat pups from birth to 4 days old via hypertonic formula feeding, full-body hypoxic stress, and lipopolysaccharide administration to mimic bacterial colonization. Healthy breastfed (BF) controls and NEC rat pups were imaged at 2- and 4-days old. Intestinal tissue oxygen saturation was measured with PAI imaging for oxy- and deoxyhemoglobin levels. To measure intestinal motility, ultrasound and co-registered PAI cine recordings were used to capture intestinal peristalsis motion and contrast agent (indocyanine green) transit within the intestinal lumen. Additionally, both midplane two-dimensional and volumetric three-dimensional imaging acquisitions were assessed for oxygenation and motility. RESULTS: NEC pups showed a significant decrease of intestinal tissue oxygenation as compared to healthy BF controls at both ages (2-days old: 55.90% +/− 3.77% vs 44.12% +/− 7.18%; 4-days old: 56.13% +/− 3.52% vs 38.86% +/− 8.33%). Intestinal motility, assessed using a computational intestinal deformation analysis, demonstrated a significant reduction in the intestinal motility index in both early (2-day) and established (4-day) NEC. Extensive NEC damage was confirmed with histology and dysmotility was confirmed by small intestinal transit assay. CONCLUSIONS: This study presents PAI as a successful emerging diagnostic imaging modality for both intestinal tissue oxygenation and intestinal motility disease hallmarks in a rat NEC model. PAI presents enormous significance and potential for fundamentally changing current clinical paradigms for detecting and monitoring intestinal pathologies in the premature infant.
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spelling pubmed-106346972023-11-13 Photoacoustic Imaging for Non-Invasive Assessment of Physiological Biomarkers of Intestinal Injury in Experimental Necrotizing Enterocolitis Weis, Jared A. Rauh, Jessica L. Ellison, Maryssa A. Cruz-Diaz, Nildris Yamaleyeva, Liliya M. Welch, Cherrie D. Zeller, Kristen A. Weis, Victoria G. bioRxiv Article BACKGROUND: Necrotizing enterocolitis (NEC) is an often-lethal disease of the premature infants’ intestinal tract that is exacerbated by significant difficulties in early and accurate diagnosis. In NEC disease, the intestine often exhibits hypoperfusion and dysmotility, which contributes to advanced disease pathogenesis. However, these physiological features cannot be accurately and quantitively assessed within the current constraints of imaging modalities frequently used in the clinic (plain film X-ray and ultrasound). We have previously demonstrated the ability of photoacoustic imaging (PAI) to non-invasively and quantitively assess intestinal tissue oxygenation and motility in a healthy neonatal rat model. As a first-in-disease application, we evaluated NEC pathogenesis using PAI to assess intestinal health biomarkers in a preclinical neonatal rat experimental model of NEC. METHODS: NEC was induced in neonatal rat pups from birth to 4 days old via hypertonic formula feeding, full-body hypoxic stress, and lipopolysaccharide administration to mimic bacterial colonization. Healthy breastfed (BF) controls and NEC rat pups were imaged at 2- and 4-days old. Intestinal tissue oxygen saturation was measured with PAI imaging for oxy- and deoxyhemoglobin levels. To measure intestinal motility, ultrasound and co-registered PAI cine recordings were used to capture intestinal peristalsis motion and contrast agent (indocyanine green) transit within the intestinal lumen. Additionally, both midplane two-dimensional and volumetric three-dimensional imaging acquisitions were assessed for oxygenation and motility. RESULTS: NEC pups showed a significant decrease of intestinal tissue oxygenation as compared to healthy BF controls at both ages (2-days old: 55.90% +/− 3.77% vs 44.12% +/− 7.18%; 4-days old: 56.13% +/− 3.52% vs 38.86% +/− 8.33%). Intestinal motility, assessed using a computational intestinal deformation analysis, demonstrated a significant reduction in the intestinal motility index in both early (2-day) and established (4-day) NEC. Extensive NEC damage was confirmed with histology and dysmotility was confirmed by small intestinal transit assay. CONCLUSIONS: This study presents PAI as a successful emerging diagnostic imaging modality for both intestinal tissue oxygenation and intestinal motility disease hallmarks in a rat NEC model. PAI presents enormous significance and potential for fundamentally changing current clinical paradigms for detecting and monitoring intestinal pathologies in the premature infant. Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory 2023-10-23 /pmc/articles/PMC10634697/ /pubmed/37961632 http://dx.doi.org/10.1101/2023.10.20.563296 Text en https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivatives 4.0 International License (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/) , which allows reusers to copy and distribute the material in any medium or format in unadapted form only, for noncommercial purposes only, and only so long as attribution is given to the creator.
spellingShingle Article
Weis, Jared A.
Rauh, Jessica L.
Ellison, Maryssa A.
Cruz-Diaz, Nildris
Yamaleyeva, Liliya M.
Welch, Cherrie D.
Zeller, Kristen A.
Weis, Victoria G.
Photoacoustic Imaging for Non-Invasive Assessment of Physiological Biomarkers of Intestinal Injury in Experimental Necrotizing Enterocolitis
title Photoacoustic Imaging for Non-Invasive Assessment of Physiological Biomarkers of Intestinal Injury in Experimental Necrotizing Enterocolitis
title_full Photoacoustic Imaging for Non-Invasive Assessment of Physiological Biomarkers of Intestinal Injury in Experimental Necrotizing Enterocolitis
title_fullStr Photoacoustic Imaging for Non-Invasive Assessment of Physiological Biomarkers of Intestinal Injury in Experimental Necrotizing Enterocolitis
title_full_unstemmed Photoacoustic Imaging for Non-Invasive Assessment of Physiological Biomarkers of Intestinal Injury in Experimental Necrotizing Enterocolitis
title_short Photoacoustic Imaging for Non-Invasive Assessment of Physiological Biomarkers of Intestinal Injury in Experimental Necrotizing Enterocolitis
title_sort photoacoustic imaging for non-invasive assessment of physiological biomarkers of intestinal injury in experimental necrotizing enterocolitis
topic Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10634697/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/37961632
http://dx.doi.org/10.1101/2023.10.20.563296
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