Network


Latest external collaboration on country level. Dive into details by clicking on the dots.

Hotspot


Dive into the research topics where Dragoş M. Vasilescu is active.

Publication


Featured researches published by Dragoş M. Vasilescu.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2012

Assessment of morphometry of pulmonary acini in mouse lungs by nondestructive imaging using multiscale microcomputed tomography.

Dragoş M. Vasilescu; Zhiyun Gao; Punam K. Saha; Leilei Yin; Ge Wang; Beatrice Haefeli-Bleuer; Matthias Ochs; Ewald R. Weibel; Eric A. Hoffman

Establishing the 3D architecture and morphometry of the intact pulmonary acinus is an essential step toward a more complete understanding of the relationship of lung structure and function. We combined a special fixation method with a unique volumetric nondestructive imaging technique and image processing tools to separate individual acini in the mouse lung. Interior scans of the parenchyma at a resolution of 2 µm enabled the reconstruction and quantitative study of whole acini by image analysis and stereologic methods, yielding data characterizing the 3D morphometry of the pulmonary acinus. The 3D reconstructions compared well with the architecture of silicon rubber casts of mouse acini. The image-based segmentation of individual acini allowed the computation of acinar volume and surface area, as well as estimation of the number of alveoli per acinus using stereologic methods. The acinar morphometry of male C57BL/6 mice age 12 wk and 91 wk was compared. Significant increases in all parameters as a function of age suggest a continuous change of the lung morphometry, with an increase in alveoli beyond what has been previously viewed as the maturation phase of the animals. Our image analysis methods open up opportunities for defining and quantitatively assessing the acinar structure in healthy and diseased lungs. The methods applied here to mice can be adjusted for the study of similarly prepared human lungs.


Journal of Applied Physiology | 2013

Stereological assessment of mouse lung parenchyma via nondestructive, multiscale micro-CT imaging validated by light microscopic histology

Dragoş M. Vasilescu; Christine Klinge; Lars Knudsen; Leilei Yin; Ge Wang; Ewald R. Weibel; Matthias Ochs; Eric A. Hoffman

Quantitative assessment of the lung microstructure using standard stereological methods such as volume fractions of tissue, alveolar surface area, or number of alveoli, are essential for understanding the state of normal and diseased lung. These measures are traditionally obtained from histological sections of the lung tissue, a process that ultimately destroys the three-dimensional (3-D) anatomy of the tissue. In comparison, a novel X-ray-based imaging method that allows nondestructive sectioning and imaging of fixed lungs at multiple resolutions can overcome this limitation. Scanning of the whole lung at high resolution and subsequent regional sampling at ultrahigh resolution without physically dissecting the organ allows the application of design-based stereology for assessment of the whole lung structure. Here we validate multiple stereological estimates performed on micro-computed tomography (μCT) images by comparing them with those obtained via conventional histology on the same mouse lungs. We explore and discuss the potentials and limitations of the two approaches. Histological examination offers higher resolution and the qualitative differentiation of tissues by staining, but ultimately loses 3-D tissue relationships, whereas μCT allows for the integration of morphometric data with the spatial complexity of lung structure. However, μCT has limited resolution satisfactory for the sterological estimates presented in this study but not for differentiation of tissues. We conclude that introducing stereological methods in μCT studies adds value by providing quantitative information on internal structures while not curtailing more complex approaches to the study of lung architecture in the context of physiological or pathological studies.


Journal of Applied Physiology | 2012

Optimized murine lung preparation for detailed structural evaluation via micro-computed tomography

Dragoş M. Vasilescu; Lars Knudsen; Matthias Ochs; Ewald R. Weibel; Eric A. Hoffman

Utilizing micro-X-ray CT (μCT) imaging, we sought to generate an atlas of in vivo and intact/ex vivo lungs from normal murine strains. In vivo imaging allows visualization of parenchymal density and small airways (15-28 μm/voxel). Ex vivo imaging of the intact lung via μCT allows for improved understanding of the three-dimensional lung architecture at the alveolar level with voxel dimensions of 1-2 μm. μCT requires that air spaces remain air-filled to detect alveolar architecture while in vivo structural geometry of the lungs is maintained. To achieve these requirements, a fixation and imaging methodology that permits nondestructive whole lung ex vivo μCT imaging has been implemented and tested. After in vivo imaging, lungs from supine anesthetized C57Bl/6 mice, at 15, 20, and 25 cmH(2)O airway pressure, were fixed in situ via vascular perfusion using a two-stage flushing system while held at 20 cmH(2)O airway pressure. Extracted fixed lungs were air-dried. Whole lung volume was acquired at 1, 7, 21, and >70 days after the lungs were dried and served as validation for fixation stability. No significant shrinkage was observed: +8.95% change from in vivo to fixed lung (P = 0.12), -1.47% change from day 1 to day 7 (P = 0.07), -2.51% change from day 1 to day 21 (P = 0.05), and -4.90% change from day 1 to day 70 and thereafter (P = 0.04). μCT evaluation showed well-fixed alveoli and capillary beds correlating with histological analysis. A fixation and imaging method has been established for μCT imaging of the murine lung that allows for ex vivo morphometric analysis, representative of the in vivo lung.


Journal of Applied Physiology | 2013

Multiscale imaging and registration-driven model for pulmonary acinar mechanics in the mouse

Haribalan Kumar; Dragoş M. Vasilescu; Youbing Yin; Eric A. Hoffman; Merryn H. Tawhai; Ching-Long Lin

A registration-based multiscale method to obtain a deforming geometric model of mouse acinus is presented. An intact mouse lung was fixed by means of vascular perfusion at a hydrostatic inflation pressure of 20 cmH(2)O. Microcomputed tomography (μCT) scans were obtained at multiple resolutions. Substructural morphometric analysis of a complete acinus was performed by computing a surface-to-volume (S/V) ratio directly from the 3D reconstruction of the acinar geometry. A geometric similarity is observed to exist in the acinus where S/V is approximately preserved anywhere in the model. Using multiscale registration, the shape of the acinus at an elevated inflation pressure of 25 cmH(2)O is estimated. Changes in the alveolar geometry suggest that the deformation within the acinus is not isotropic. In particular, the expansion of the acinus (from 20 to 25 cmH(2)O) is accompanied by an increase in both surface area and volume in such a way that the S/V ratio is not significantly altered. The developed method forms a useful tool in registration-driven fluid and solid mechanics studies as displacement of the alveolar wall becomes available in a discrete sense.


Journal of Applied Physiology | 2016

Morphometric differences between central vs. surface acini in A/J mice using high-resolution micro-computed tomography

Abhilash S. Kizhakke Puliyakote; Dragoş M. Vasilescu; John D. Newell; Ge Wang; Ewald R. Weibel; Eric A. Hoffman

Through interior tomography, high-resolution microcomputed tomography (μCT) systems provide the ability to nondestructively assess the pulmonary acinus at micron and submicron resolutions. With the application of systematic uniform random sampling (SURS) principles applied to in situ fixed, intact, ex vivo lungs, we have sought to characterize morphometric differences in central vs. surface acini to better understand how well surface acini reflect global acinar geometry. Lungs from six mice (A/J strain, 15-20 wk of age) were perfusion fixed in situ and imaged using a multiresolution μCT system (Micro XCT 400, Zeiss). With the use of lower-resolution whole lung images, SURS methods were used for identification of central and surface foci for high-resolution imaging. Acinar morphometric metrics included diameters, lengths, and branching angles for each alveolar duct and total path lengths from entrance of the acinus to the terminal alveolar sacs. In addition, acinar volume, alveolar surface area, and surface area/volume ratios were assessed. A generation-based analysis demonstrated that central acini have significantly smaller branch diameters at each generation with no significant increase in branch lengths. In addition to larger-diameter alveolar ducts, surface acini had significantly increased numbers of branches and terminal alveolar sacs. The total path lengths from the acinar entrance to the terminal nodes were found to be higher in the case of surface acini. Volumes and surface areas of surface acini are greater than central acini, but there were no differences in surface/volume ratios. In conclusion, there are significant structural differences between surface and central acini in the A/J mouse.


Journal of Applied Physiology | 2016

A skeleton-tree-based approach to acinar morphometric analysis using microcomputed tomography with comparison of acini in young and old C57BL/6 mice

Abhilash S. Kizhakke Puliyakote; Dragoş M. Vasilescu; Kriti Sen Sharma; Ge Wang; Eric A. Hoffman

We seek to establish a method using interior tomographic techniques (Xradia MicroXCT-400) for acinar morphometric analysis using the pathway center lines from micro X-ray computed tomographic (Micro-CT) images as the road map. Through the application of these techniques, we present a method to extend the atlas of murine lungs to acinar levels and present a comparison between two age groups of the C57BL/6 strain. Lungs fixed via vascular perfusion were scanned using high-resolution Micro-CT protocols. Individual acini were segmented, and skeletonized paths to alveolar sacs from the entrance to the acinus were formed. Morphometric parameters, including branch lengths, diameters, and branching angles, were generated. Six mice each, at two age groups (∼20 and ∼90 wk of age), were studied. Additive Gaussian noise (0 mean and SD 1, 2, 5, and 10) was used to test the robustness of the analytical method. Noise-based variations were within ±6 μm for branch lengths and ±5 μm for diameters. At a noise level of 10, errors increased. Branch diameters were less susceptible to noise than lengths. There was >95% center line overlap across all noise levels. The measurements obtained using the center lines as a road map were not affected by added noise. Acini from younger mice had smaller branch diameters and lengths at all generations without significant differences in branching angles. The relative distribution of volume in the alveolar ducts was similar across both age groups. The method has been demonstrated to be repeatable and robust to image noise and provides a new, nondestructive technique to assess and compare acinar morphometry quantitatively.


american thoracic society international conference | 2009

Non-Destructive Morphometric Assessment of Murine Acinus Via Hi-Res microCT.

Dragoş M. Vasilescu; D Chon; T Fong; J Heverhagen; Matthias Ochs; Ewald R. Weibel; Eric A. Hoffman


american thoracic society international conference | 2010

A Multi-Scale Topo-Morphologic Opening Approach For Segmenting The Pulmonary Acinus In High Resolution Micro-CT Images Of Fixed Murine Lungs

Zhiyun Gao; Dragoş M. Vasilescu; Eric A. Hoffman; Punam K. Saha


Archive | 2015

from classical dispersive aerosol transport theories Kinematically irreversible acinar flow: a departure

J. P. Butler; A. Tsuda; Ching-Long Lin; Haribalan Kumar; Dragoş M. Vasilescu; Youbing Yin; Eric A. Hoffman; Merryn H. Tawhai


Archive | 2015

healthy human pulmonary acinus Evidence for minimal oxygen heterogeneity in the

Annalisa J. Swan; Merryn H. Tawhai; Matthias Ochs; Ewald R. Weibel; Eric A. Hoffman; Dragoş M. Vasilescu; Zhiyun Gao; Punam K. Saha; Leilei Yin; Ge Wang

Collaboration


Dive into the Dragoş M. Vasilescu's collaboration.

Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Eric A. Hoffman

University of Central Florida

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Researchain Logo
Decentralizing Knowledge