RESUMEN
Nanoscale echogenic bubbles (NBs), can be used as a theranostic platform for the localized delivery of encapsulated drugs. However, the generation of NBs is challenging, because they have lifetimes as short as milliseconds in solution. The aim of this work has been the optimization of a preparation method for the generation of stable NBs, characterized by measuring: a) acoustic efficiency, b) nano-size, to ensure passive tumour targeting, c) stability during storage and after injection and d) ability to entrap drugs. NBs are monodisperse and ultra-stable, their stability achieved by generation of an amphiphilic multilamellar shell able to efficiently retain the PFC gas. The NBs perform as good acoustic enhancers over a wide frequency range and out of resonant conditions, as tested in both in vitro and in vivo experiments, proving to be a potential platform for the production of versatile carriers to be used in ultrasound-assisted diagnostic, therapeutic and theranostic applications.
Asunto(s)
Acústica , Microburbujas , Ultrasonografía/métodos , Medios de ContrasteRESUMEN
The science and technology of thin films require the development of nondestructive methods for their quantitative mechanical characterization with nanometric spatial resolution. High-frequency ultrasonic techniques--especially acoustic microscopy--and atomic force microscopy (AFM) have been demonstrated to represent versatile tools for developing such methods. In particular, in the last 15 years, the combination of AFM, which can probe the surface of a sample by applying ultralow loads (from micronewtons down to piconewtons) with a micromachined tip having an apex radius of a few nanometers, and ultrasonics techniques led researchers to develop some unique tools which allow one to perform not only spot measurements of the sample elastic modulus, but also to obtain both the qualitative imaging of mechanical properties and the quantitative mapping of the elastic modulus of the sample surface with nanometric lateral resolution. In the present review, firstly a brief overview of the main ultrasound-based techniques for thin film characterization is reported. Then, some of the ultrasonic AFM techniques are described, emphasizing their capability of retrieving maps of both the tip-sample contact stiffness and the sample elastic modulus. Although these techniques are less affected by the mechanical properties of the substrates than standard indentation tests, a method for the correction of the substrate effect in ultrathin films is reported in detail. Finally, by probing the mechanical properties of a small portion of the sample volume underneath the tip, we illustrate the techniques as tools for the qualitative and quantitative characterization of variations in the adhesion between a thin film and a buried interface, as well as for detecting subsurface defects, voids, cracks, and dislocations.
RESUMEN
Thermo-responsive chitosan microbubbles were developed as new therapeutic device for vehiculating gases to tissues concomitantly to hyperthermic treatments. Aiming at applications to non-invasive temperature monitoring, microbubbles were characterized for acoustic attenuation properties in the 1-15 MHz range both by direct methods and by B-mode Ultrasound imaging up to 43 degrees C, which is the temperature used in clinical hyperthermia. The chitosan microbubbles showed a mean diameter of 1 microm at room temperature, which slightly decreases after heating, enhancing gas delivery. Acoustic attenuation monotonically increases with temperature, being the extent of such variation larger than that observed in tissues. Both the physico-chemical and the acoustic profiles showed reversible variations of microbubbles approaching 43 degrees C, which might be of interest for applications in hyperthermic therapies.