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Dive into the research topics where George A. Stanciu is active.

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Featured researches published by George A. Stanciu.


Scientific Reports | 2015

Experimenting Liver Fibrosis Diagnostic by Two Photon Excitation Microscopy and Bag-of-Features Image Classification

Stefan G. Stanciu; S. Xu; Qiwen Peng; Jie Yan; George A. Stanciu; Roy E. Welsch; Peter T. C. So; Gabor Csucs; Hanry Yu

The accurate staging of liver fibrosis is of paramount importance to determine the state of disease progression, therapy responses, and to optimize disease treatment strategies. Non-linear optical microscopy techniques such as two-photon excitation fluorescence (TPEF) and second harmonic generation (SHG) can image the endogenous signals of tissue structures and can be used for fibrosis assessment on non-stained tissue samples. While image analysis of collagen in SHG images was consistently addressed until now, cellular and tissue information included in TPEF images, such as inflammatory and hepatic cell damage, equally important as collagen deposition imaged by SHG, remain poorly exploited to date. We address this situation by experimenting liver fibrosis quantification and scoring using a combined approach based on TPEF liver surface imaging on a Thioacetamide-induced rat model and a gradient based Bag-of-Features (BoF) image classification strategy. We report the assessed performance results and discuss the influence of specific BoF parameters to the performance of the fibrosis scoring framework.


IEEE Transactions on Nanobioscience | 2012

Hybrid Nanomaterial for Stabilizing the Antibiofilm Activity of Eugenia carryophyllata Essential Oil

Alexandru Mihai Grumezescu; Mariana Carmen Chifiriuc; Crina Saviuc; Valentina Grumezescu; Radu Hristu; Dan Eduard Mihaiescu; George A. Stanciu; Ecaterina Andronescu

The aim of the present study was to demonstrate that Fe3O4/oleic acid core/shell nanostructures could be used as systems for stabilizing the Eugenia carryophyllata essential oil (EO) on catheter surface pellicles, in order to improve their resistance to fungal colonization. EO microwave assisted extraction was performed in a Neo-Clevenger (related) device and its chemical composition was settled by GC-MS analysis. Fe3O4/oleic acid-core/shell nanoparticles (NP) were obtained by a precipitation method under microwave condition. High resolution transmission electron microscopy (HR-TEM) was used as a primary characterization method. The NPs were processed to achieve a core/shell/EO coated-shell nanosystem further used for coating the inner surface of central venous catheter samples. The tested fungal strains have been recently isolated from different clinical specimens. The biofilm architecture was assessed by confocal laser scanning microscopy (CLSM). Our results claim the usage of hybrid nanomaterial (core/shell/coated-shell) for the stabilization of E. carryophyllata EO, which prevented or inhibited the fungal biofilm development on the functionalized catheter, highlighting the opportunity of using these nanosystems to obtain improved, anti-biofilm coatings for biomedical applications.


Molecules | 2014

Efficiency of Vanilla, Patchouli and Ylang Ylang Essential Oils Stabilized by Iron Oxide@C14 Nanostructures against Bacterial Adherence and Biofilms Formed by Staphylococcus aureus and Klebsiella pneumoniae Clinical Strains

Maxim Bilcu; Alexandru Mihai Grumezescu; Alexandra Elena Oprea; Roxana Cristina Popescu; George Mogoșanu; Radu Hristu; George A. Stanciu; Dan Mihailescu; Veronica Lazar; Eugenia Bezirtzoglou; Mariana C. Chifiriuc

Biofilms formed by bacterial cells are associated with drastically enhanced resistance against most antimicrobial agents, contributing to the persistence and chronicization of the microbial infections and to therapy failure. The purpose of this study was to combine the unique properties of magnetic nanoparticles with the antimicrobial activity of three essential oils to obtain novel nanobiosystems that could be used as coatings for catheter pieces with an improved resistance to Staphylococcus aureus and Klebsiella pneumoniae clinical strains adherence and biofilm development. The essential oils of ylang ylang, patchouli and vanilla were stabilized by the interaction with iron oxide@C14 nanoparticles to be further used as coating agents for medical surfaces. Iron oxide@C14 was prepared by co-precipitation of Fe+2 and Fe+3 and myristic acid (C14) in basic medium. Vanilla essential oil loaded nanoparticles pelliculised on the catheter samples surface strongly inhibited both the initial adherence of S. aureus cells (quantified at 24 h) and the development of the mature biofilm quantified at 48 h. Patchouli and ylang-ylang essential oils inhibited mostly the initial adherence phase of S. aureus biofilm development. In the case of K. pneumoniae, all tested nanosystems exhibited similar efficiency, being active mostly against the adherence K. pneumoniae cells to the tested catheter specimens. The new nanobiosystems based on vanilla, patchouli and ylang-ylang essential oils could be of a great interest for the biomedical field, opening new directions for the design of film-coated surfaces with anti-adherence and anti-biofilm properties.


Microscopy Research and Technique | 2010

Automated compensation of light attenuation in confocal microscopy by exact histogram specification

Stefan G. Stanciu; George A. Stanciu; Dinu Coltuc

Confocal laser scanning microscopy (CLSM) enables us to capture images representing optical sections on the volume of a specimen. The images acquired from different layers have a different contrast: the images obtained from the deeper layers of the specimen will have a lower contrast with respect to the images obtained from the topmost layers. The main reasons responsible for the effects described above are light absorption and scattering by the atoms and molecules contained in the volume through which the light passes. Also light attenuation can be caused by the inclination of the observed surface. In the case of the surfaces that have a steep inclination, the reflected light will have a different direction than the one of the detector. We propose a technique of digital image processing that can be used to compensate the effects of light attenuation based on histogram operations. We process the image series obtained by CLSM by exact histogram specification and equalization. In this case, a strict ordering among pixels must be induced in order to achieve the exact histogram modeling. The processed images will end up having exactly the specified histogram and not a histogram with a shape that just resembles to the specified one, as in the case of classical histogram specification algorithms. Experimental results and theoretical aspects of the induced ordering are discussed, as well as a comparison between several histogram modeling techniques with respect to the processing of image series obtained by confocal microscopy. Microsc. Res. Tech., 2010.


Scientific Reports | 2015

High-resolution quantitative determination of dielectric function by using scattering scanning near-field optical microscopy

Denis E. Tranca; Stefan G. Stanciu; Radu Hristu; C. Stoichita; Syed A. M. Tofail; George A. Stanciu

A new method for high-resolution quantitative measurement of the dielectric function by using scattering scanning near-field optical microscopy (s-SNOM) is presented. The method is based on a calibration procedure that uses the s-SNOM oscillating dipole model of the probe-sample interaction and quantitative s-SNOM measurements. The nanoscale capabilities of the method have the potential to enable novel applications in various fields such as nano-electronics, nano-photonics, biology or medicine.


Measurement Science and Technology | 2009

Detector array incorporated optical scattering instrument for nephelometric measurements on small particles

Ankur Gogoi; Lakhya J. Borthakur; Amarjyoti Choudhury; George A. Stanciu; Gazi A. Ahmed

The design and fabrication of a laser-based laboratory light scattering instrument that uses an array of 16 static Si photodetectors and can be operated at three different incident wavelengths (543.5 nm, 594.5 nm and 632.8 nm) are described. The instrument can measure scattered light signals from 10° to 170° in steps of 1°. The accuracy and the reliability of the setup were verified by conducting measurements on the light scattering properties of polystyrene spheres suspended in water and comparing the results with theoretical Mie calculations. The measurements using this instrument on the light scattering properties of spheroidal rutile (TiO2) particles of average diameter 250 nm are presented.


Microscopy Research and Technique | 2012

Influence of atomic force microscopy acquisition parameters on thin film roughness analysis

Radu Hristu; Stefan G. Stanciu; George A. Stanciu; I. Çapan; Burcu Güner; Matem Erdogan

A reliable procedure for measuring parameters connected to surface roughness is needed to compare the gas sensing properties of various thin films or the effect of different fabrication procedures on the surface roughness and the sensing properties. In this article, we propose to investigate how the acquisition parameters specific to atomic force microscopy investigations such as pixel size, scan area and scan speed influence the roughness parameters, namely root mean square and surface area ratio, commonly used for characterizing the gas sensing properties of porphyrins and other materials. Microsc. Res. Tech. 2012.


Ultramicroscopy | 2011

Influence of Confocal Scanning Laser Microscopy specific acquisition parameters on the detection and matching of Speeded-Up Robust Features

Stefan G. Stanciu; Radu Hristu; George A. Stanciu

The robustness and distinctiveness of local features to various object or scene deformations and to modifications of the acquisition parameters play key roles in the design of many computer vision applications. In this paper we present the results of our experiments on the behavior of a recently developed technique for local feature detection and description, Speeded-Up Robust Features (SURF), regarding image modifications specific to Confocal Scanning Laser Microscopy (CSLM). We analyze the repeatability of detected SURF keypoints and the precision-recall of their matching under modifications of three important CSLM parameters: pinhole aperture, photomultiplier (PMT) gain and laser beam power. During any investigation by CSLM these three parameters have to be modified, individually or together, in order to optimize the contrast and the Signal Noise Ratio (SNR), being also inherently modified when changing the microscope objective. Our experiments show that an important amount of SURF features can be detected at the same physical locations in images collected at different values of the pinhole aperture, PMT gain and laser beam power, and further on can be successfully matched based on their descriptors. In the final part, we exemplify the potential of SURF in CSLM imaging by presenting a SURF-based computer vision application that deals with the mosaicing of images collected by this technique.


Optics Express | 2014

A study on the image contrast of pseudo-heterodyned scattering scanning near-field optical microscopy

Denis E. Tranca; Catalin Stoichita; Radu Hristu; Stefan G. Stanciu; George A. Stanciu

The dependence of the near-field signal on the dielectric function of a specific material proposes scattering-type near-field optical microscopy (s-SNOM) as a viable tool for material characterization studies. Our experiment shows that specific material identification by s-SNOM is not a straightforward task as parameters involved in the detection scheme can also influence material contrast measurements. More precisely, we demonstrate that s-SNOM contrast in a pseudo-heterodyne detection configuration depends on the oscillation amplitude of the reference mirror and that for reliable measurements of the contrast between different materials this aspect needs to be taken into consideration.


Microscopy and Microanalysis | 2014

Surface Charge and Carbon Contamination on an Electron-Beam-Irradiated Hydroxyapatite Thin Film Investigated by Photoluminescence and Phase Imaging in Atomic Force Microscopy

Radu Hristu; Denis E. Tranca; Stefan G. Stanciu; Maros Gregor; T. Plecenik; Martin Truchly; T. Roch; Syed A. M. Tofail; George A. Stanciu

The surface properties of hydroxyapatite, including electric charge, can influence the biological response, tissue compatibility, and adhesion of biological cells and biomolecules. Results reported here help in understanding this influence by creating charged domains on hydroxyapatite thin films deposited on silicon using electron beam irradiation and investigating their shape, properties, and carbon contamination for different doses of incident injected charge by two methods. Photoluminescence laser scanning microscopy was used to image electrostatic charge trapped at pre-existing and irradiation-induced defects within these domains, while phase imaging in atomic force microscopy was used to image the carbon contamination. Scanning Auger electron spectroscopy and Kelvin probe force microscopy were used as a reference for the atomic force microscopy phase contrast and photoluminescence laser scanning microscopy measurements. Our experiment shows that by combining the two imaging techniques the effects of trapped charge and carbon contamination can be separated. Such separation yields new possibilities for advancing the current understanding of how surface charge influences mediation of cellular and protein interactions in biomaterials.

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Stefan G. Stanciu

Politehnica University of Bucharest

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Radu Hristu

Politehnica University of Bucharest

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Catalin Stoichita

Politehnica University of Bucharest

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Efstathios K. Polychroniadis

Aristotle University of Thessaloniki

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O'Dae Kwon

Pohang University of Science and Technology

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