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Nanodroplet vaporization with pulsed-laser excitation repeatedly amplifies photoacoustic signals at low vaporization thresholds

Nanodroplets' explosive vaporization triggered by absorption of laser pulses produces very large volume changes. These volume changes are two orders of magnitude higher than those of thermoelastic expansion generated by equivalent laser pulses, and should generate correspondingly higher photoac...

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Autores principales: Mendes, Maria Inês P., Coelho, Carlos D. F., Schaberle, Fábio A., Moreno, Maria João, Calvete, Mário J. F., Arnaut, Luis G.
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: The Royal Society of Chemistry 2023
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10690495/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/38046627
http://dx.doi.org/10.1039/d3ra05639b
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author Mendes, Maria Inês P.
Coelho, Carlos D. F.
Schaberle, Fábio A.
Moreno, Maria João
Calvete, Mário J. F.
Arnaut, Luis G.
author_facet Mendes, Maria Inês P.
Coelho, Carlos D. F.
Schaberle, Fábio A.
Moreno, Maria João
Calvete, Mário J. F.
Arnaut, Luis G.
author_sort Mendes, Maria Inês P.
collection PubMed
description Nanodroplets' explosive vaporization triggered by absorption of laser pulses produces very large volume changes. These volume changes are two orders of magnitude higher than those of thermoelastic expansion generated by equivalent laser pulses, and should generate correspondingly higher photoacoustic waves (PAW). The generation of intense PAWs is desirable in photoacoustic tomography (PAT) to increase sensitivity. The biocompatibility and simplicity of nanodroplets obtained by sonication of perfluoropentane (PFP) in an aqueous solution of bovine serum albumin (BSA) containing a dye make them particularly appealing for use as contrast agents in clinical applications of PAT. Their usefulness depends on stability and reproducible vaporization of nanodroplets (liquid PFP inside) to microbubbles (gaseous PFP inside), and reversible condensation to nanodroplets. This work incorporates porphyrins with fluorinated chains and BSA labelled with fluorescent probes in PFP nanodroplets to investigate the structure and properties of such nanodroplets. Droplets prepared with average diameters in the 400–1000 nm range vaporize when exposed to nanosecond laser pulses with fluences above 3 mJ cm(−2) and resist coalescence. The fluorinated chains are likely responsible for the low vaporization threshold, ∼2.5 mJ cm(−2), which was obtained from the laser fluence dependence of the photoacoustic wave amplitudes. Only ca. 10% of the droplets incorporate fluorinated porphyrins. Nevertheless, PAWs generated with nanodroplets are ten times higher than those generated by aqueous BSA solutions containing an equivalent amount of porphyrin. Remarkably, successive laser pulses result in similar amplification, indicating that the microbubbles revert back to nanodroplets at a rate faster than the laser repetition rate (10 Hz). PFP nanodroplets are promising contrast agents for PAT and their performance increases with properly designed dyes.
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spelling pubmed-106904952023-12-02 Nanodroplet vaporization with pulsed-laser excitation repeatedly amplifies photoacoustic signals at low vaporization thresholds Mendes, Maria Inês P. Coelho, Carlos D. F. Schaberle, Fábio A. Moreno, Maria João Calvete, Mário J. F. Arnaut, Luis G. RSC Adv Chemistry Nanodroplets' explosive vaporization triggered by absorption of laser pulses produces very large volume changes. These volume changes are two orders of magnitude higher than those of thermoelastic expansion generated by equivalent laser pulses, and should generate correspondingly higher photoacoustic waves (PAW). The generation of intense PAWs is desirable in photoacoustic tomography (PAT) to increase sensitivity. The biocompatibility and simplicity of nanodroplets obtained by sonication of perfluoropentane (PFP) in an aqueous solution of bovine serum albumin (BSA) containing a dye make them particularly appealing for use as contrast agents in clinical applications of PAT. Their usefulness depends on stability and reproducible vaporization of nanodroplets (liquid PFP inside) to microbubbles (gaseous PFP inside), and reversible condensation to nanodroplets. This work incorporates porphyrins with fluorinated chains and BSA labelled with fluorescent probes in PFP nanodroplets to investigate the structure and properties of such nanodroplets. Droplets prepared with average diameters in the 400–1000 nm range vaporize when exposed to nanosecond laser pulses with fluences above 3 mJ cm(−2) and resist coalescence. The fluorinated chains are likely responsible for the low vaporization threshold, ∼2.5 mJ cm(−2), which was obtained from the laser fluence dependence of the photoacoustic wave amplitudes. Only ca. 10% of the droplets incorporate fluorinated porphyrins. Nevertheless, PAWs generated with nanodroplets are ten times higher than those generated by aqueous BSA solutions containing an equivalent amount of porphyrin. Remarkably, successive laser pulses result in similar amplification, indicating that the microbubbles revert back to nanodroplets at a rate faster than the laser repetition rate (10 Hz). PFP nanodroplets are promising contrast agents for PAT and their performance increases with properly designed dyes. The Royal Society of Chemistry 2023-12-01 /pmc/articles/PMC10690495/ /pubmed/38046627 http://dx.doi.org/10.1039/d3ra05639b Text en This journal is © The Royal Society of Chemistry https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/
spellingShingle Chemistry
Mendes, Maria Inês P.
Coelho, Carlos D. F.
Schaberle, Fábio A.
Moreno, Maria João
Calvete, Mário J. F.
Arnaut, Luis G.
Nanodroplet vaporization with pulsed-laser excitation repeatedly amplifies photoacoustic signals at low vaporization thresholds
title Nanodroplet vaporization with pulsed-laser excitation repeatedly amplifies photoacoustic signals at low vaporization thresholds
title_full Nanodroplet vaporization with pulsed-laser excitation repeatedly amplifies photoacoustic signals at low vaporization thresholds
title_fullStr Nanodroplet vaporization with pulsed-laser excitation repeatedly amplifies photoacoustic signals at low vaporization thresholds
title_full_unstemmed Nanodroplet vaporization with pulsed-laser excitation repeatedly amplifies photoacoustic signals at low vaporization thresholds
title_short Nanodroplet vaporization with pulsed-laser excitation repeatedly amplifies photoacoustic signals at low vaporization thresholds
title_sort nanodroplet vaporization with pulsed-laser excitation repeatedly amplifies photoacoustic signals at low vaporization thresholds
topic Chemistry
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10690495/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/38046627
http://dx.doi.org/10.1039/d3ra05639b
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