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Dive into the research topics where Hussain Fatakdawala is active.

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Featured researches published by Hussain Fatakdawala.


Biomedical Optics Express | 2013

Multimodal in vivo imaging of oral cancer using fluorescence lifetime, photoacoustic and ultrasound techniques

Hussain Fatakdawala; Shannon Poti; Feifei Zhou; Yang Sun; Julien Bec; Jing Liu; Diego R. Yankelevich; Steven P. Tinling; Regina Gandour-Edwards; D. Gregory Farwell; Laura Marcu

This work reports a multimodal system for label-free tissue diagnosis combining fluorescence lifetime imaging (FLIm), ultrasound backscatter microscopy (UBM), and photoacoustic imaging (PAI). This system provides complementary biochemical, structural and functional features allowing for enhanced in vivo detection of oral carcinoma. Results from a hamster oral carcinoma model (normal, precancer and carcinoma) are presented demonstrating the ability of FLIm to delineate biochemical composition at the tissue surface, UBM and related radiofrequency parameters to identify disruptions in the tissue microarchitecture and PAI to map optical absorption associated with specific tissue morphology and physiology.


Analytical and Bioanalytical Chemistry | 2015

Combined fiber probe for fluorescence lifetime and Raman spectroscopy

Sebastian Dochow; Dinglong Ma; Ines Latka; Thomas Bocklitz; Brad A. Hartl; Julien Bec; Hussain Fatakdawala; Eric Marple; Kirk Urmey; Sebastian Wachsmann-Hogiu; Michael Schmitt; Laura Marcu; Jürgen Popp

AbstractIn this contribution we present a dual modality fiber optic probe combining fluorescence lifetime imaging (FLIm) and Raman spectroscopy for in vivo endoscopic applications. The presented multi-spectroscopy probe enables efficient excitation and collection of fluorescence lifetime signals for FLIm in the UV/visible wavelength region, as well as of Raman spectra in the near-IR for simultaneous Raman/FLIm imaging. The probe was characterized in terms of its lateral resolution and distance dependency of the Raman and FLIm signals. In addition, the feasibility of the probe for in vivo FLIm and Raman spectral characterization of tissue was demonstrated.n Graphical AbstractAn image comparison between FLIm and Raman spectroscopy acquired with the bimodal probe onseveral tissue samples


Journal of Biomedical Optics | 2014

Rotational multispectral fluorescence lifetime imaging and intravascular ultrasound: bimodal system for intravascular applications

Dinglong M. Ma; Julien Bec; Diego R. Yankelevich; Dimitris Gorpas; Hussain Fatakdawala; Laura Marcu

Abstract. We report the development and validation of a hybrid intravascular diagnostic system combining multispectral fluorescence lifetime imaging (FLIm) and intravascular ultrasound (IVUS) for cardiovascular imaging applications. A prototype FLIm system based on fluorescence pulse sampling technique providing information on artery biochemical composition was integrated with a commercial IVUS system providing information on artery morphology. A customized 3-Fr bimodal catheter combining a rotational side-view fiberoptic and a 40-MHz IVUS transducer was constructed for sequential helical scanning (rotation and pullback) of tubular structures. Validation of this bimodal approach was conducted in pig heart coronary arteries. Spatial resolution, fluorescence detection efficiency, pulse broadening effect, and lifetime measurement variability of the FLIm system were systematically evaluated. Current results show that this system is capable of temporarily resolving the fluorescence emission simultaneously in multiple spectral channels in a single pullback sequence. Accurate measurements of fluorescence decay characteristics from arterial segments can be obtained rapidly (e.g., 20 mm in 5 s), and accurate co-registration of fluorescence and ultrasound features can be achieved. The current finding demonstrates the compatibility of FLIm instrumentation with in vivo clinical investigations and its potential to complement conventional IVUS during catheterization procedures.


Journal of Cardiovascular Translational Research | 2015

Fluorescence Lifetime Imaging Combined with Conventional Intravascular Ultrasound for Enhanced Assessment of Atherosclerotic Plaques: an Ex Vivo Study in Human Coronary Arteries.

Hussain Fatakdawala; Dimitris Gorpas; John W. Bishop; Julien Bec; Dinglong Ma; Jeffrey A. Southard; Kenneth B. Margulies; Laura Marcu

This study evaluates the ability of label-free fluorescence lifetime imaging (FLIm) to complement intravascular ultrasound (IVUS) for concurrent visualization of human coronary vessel composition, structure, and pathology. Co-registered FLIm and IVUS data from 16 coronary segments were correlated to eight distinct pathological features including thin-cap fibroatheroma (TCFA). The sensitivity, specificity, and positive predictive value for combined FLIm-IVUS (89, 99, 89xa0%) were better than FLIm (70, 98, 88xa0%) and IVUS (45, 94, 62xa0%) alone in distinguishing between pathologies. FLIm can assess compositional changes in luminal surface through variations in fluorescence lifetime values (<3.5xa0ns for lipid-rich areas; >4xa0ns for collagen-rich areas) enabling detection of macrophages in fibrous caps (sensitivity, 86xa0%) and distinguishing between relatively stable thick-cap fibroatheromas and rupture-prone TCFA (sensitivity, 80xa0%) amongst other features. Current results demonstrate the potential of FLIm-IVUS as a new intravascular method for improved evaluation of plaques that may subsequently aid in guiding coronary intervention.


ACS Biomaterials Science & Engineering | 2017

Detection of Pentosidine Cross-Links in Cell-Secreted Decellularized Matrices Using Time Resolved Fluorescence Spectroscopy

Debika Mitra; Hussain Fatakdawala; Michael Nguyen-Truong; Amy Creecy; Jeffry S. Nyman; Laura Marcu; J. Kent Leach

Hyperglycemia-mediated, nonenzymatic collagen cross-links such as pentosidine (PENT) can have deleterious effects on cellular interactions with the extracellular matrix (ECM). Present techniques to quantify PENT are limited, motivating the need for improved methods to study the accumulation and contribution of PENT toward diabetic clinical challenges such as impaired bone healing. Current methods for studying PENT are destructive, laborious, and frequently employ oversimplified collagen films that lack the complexity of the native ECM. The primary goal of this study was to evaluate the capacity of time-resolved fluorescence spectroscopy (TRFS) to detect PENT in cell-secreted ECMs possessing enhanced compositional complexity. To demonstrate an application of this method, we assessed the response of human mesenchymal stem cells (MSCs) to cross-linked substrates to explore the role of detected PENT on osteogenic differentiation. We exposed MSC-secreted decellularized matrices (DMs) to 0.66 M ribose for 2 weeks and used TRFS to detect the accumulation of PENT. Ribose treatment resulted in a 30 nm blue shift in peak fluorescence emission and a significant decrease in average lifetime compared to that of control DMs (4.4 ± 0.3 ns vs 3.5 ± 0.09 ns). Evaluation of samples with high performance liquid chromatography (HPLC) confirmed that changes in observed fluorescence were due to PENT accumulation. A strong correlation was found between TRFS parameters and the HPLC measurement of PENT, validating the use of TRFS as an alternative method of PENT detection. Osteoblastic gene expression was significantly reduced in MSCs seeded on ribose DMs at days 7 and 14. However, no significant differences in calcium deposition were detected between control and ribose DMs. These data demonstrate the efficacy of nondestructive fluorescence spectroscopy to examine the formation of nonenzymatic collagen cross-links within biomimetic culture platforms and showcase one example where an improved biomimetic substrate can be used to probe cell-ECM interactions in the presence of collagen cross-links.


Journal of Biophotonics | 2016

Comparing Raman and fluorescence lifetime spectroscopy from human atherosclerotic lesions using a bimodal probe.

Sebastian Dochow; Hussain Fatakdawala; Jennifer E. Phipps; Dinglong Ma; Thomas Bocklitz; Michael Schmitt; John W. Bishop; Kenneth B. Margulies; Laura Marcu; Jürgen Popp

Fluorescence lifetime imaging (FLIm) and Raman spectroscopy are two promising methods to support morphological intravascular imaging techniques with chemical contrast. Both approaches are complementary and may also be used in combination with OCT/IVUS to add chemical specificity to these morphologic intravascular imaging modalities. In this contribution, both modalities were simultaneously acquired from two human coronary specimens using a bimodal probe. A previously trained SVM model was used to interpret the fluorescence lifetime data; integrated band intensities displayed in RGB false color images were used to interpret the Raman data. Both modalities demonstrate unique strengths and weaknesses and these will be discussed in comparison to histologic analyses from the two coronary arteries imaged.


IEEE Transactions on Medical Imaging | 2015

Fluorescence Lifetime Imaging and Intravascular Ultrasound: Co-Registration Study Using Ex Vivo Human Coronaries

Dimitris Gorpas; Hussain Fatakdawala; Julien Bec; Dinglong Ma; Diego R. Yankelevich; Jinyi Qi; Laura Marcu

Fluorescence lifetime imaging (FLIM) has demonstrated potential for robust assessment of atherosclerotic plaques biochemical composition and for complementing conventional intravascular ultrasound (IVUS), which provides information on plaque morphology. The success of such a bi-modal imaging modality depends on accurate segmentation of the IVUS images and proper angular registration between these two modalities. This paper reports a novel IVUS segmentation methodology addressing this issue. The image preprocessing consisted of denoising, using the Wiener filter, followed by image smoothing, implemented through the application of the alternating sequential filter on the edge separability metric images. Extraction of the lumen/intima and media/adventitia boundaries was achieved by tracing the gray-scale peaks over the A-lines of the IVUS preprocessed images. Cubic spline interpolation, in both cross-sectional and longitudinal directions, ensured boundary smoothness and continuity. The detection of the guide-wire artifact in both modalities is used for angular registration. Intraluminal studies were conducted in 13 ex vivo segments of human coronaries. The IVUS segmentation accuracy was assessed against independent manual tracings, providing 91.82% sensitivity and 97.55% specificity. The proposed methodology makes the bi-modal FLIM and IVUS approach feasible for comprehensive intravascular diagnosis by providing co-registered biochemical and morphological information of atherosclerotic plaques.


Proceedings of SPIE | 2015

Fluorescence lifetime spectroscopy for breast cancer margins assessment

Dimitris Gorpas; Hussain Fatakdawala; Yanhong Zhang; Richard J. Bold; Laura Marcu

During breast conserving surgery (BCS), which is the preferred approach to treat most early stage breast cancers, the surgeon attempts to excise the tumor volume, surrounded by thin margin of normal tissue. The intra-operative assessment of cancerous areas is a challenging procedure, with the surgeon usually relying on visual or tactile guidance. This study evaluates whether time-resolved fluorescence spectroscopy (TRFS) presents the potential to address this problem. Point TRFS measurements were obtained from 19 fresh tissue slices (7 patients) and parameters that characterize the transient signals were quantified via constrained least squares deconvolution scheme. Fibrotic tissue (FT, n=69), adipose tissue (AT, n=76), and invasive ductal carcinoma (IDC, n=27) were identified in histology and univariate statistical analysis, followed by multi-comparison test, was applied to the corresponding lifetime data. Significant differentiation between the three tissue types exists at 390 nm and 500 nm bands. The average lifetime is 3.23±0.74 ns for AT, 4.21±0.83 ns for FT and 4.71±0.35 ns (p<0.05) for IDC at 390 nm. Due to the smaller contribution of collagen in AT the average lifetime value is different from FT and IDC. Additionally, although intensity measurements do not show difference between FT and IDC, lifetime can distinguish them. Similarly, in 500 nm these values are 7.01±1.08 ns, 5.43±1.05 ns and 4.39±0.88 ns correspondingly (p<0.05) and this contrast is due to differentiation in retinol or flavins relative concentration, mostly contributing to AT. Results demonstrate the potential of TRFS to intra-operatively characterize BCS breast excised tissue in real-time and assess tumor margins.


Journal of Biomedical Optics | 2014

Time-resolved fluorescence spectroscopy and ultrasound backscatter microscopy for nondestructive evaluation of vascular grafts.

Hussain Fatakdawala; Leigh G. Griffiths; Sterling Humphrey; Laura Marcu

Quantitative and qualitative evaluations of structure and composition are important in monitoring development of engineered vascular tissue both in vitro and in vivo. Destructive techniques are an obstacle for performing time-lapse analyses from a single sample or animal. This study demonstrates the ability of time-resolved fluorescence spectroscopy (TRFS) and ultrasound backscatter microscopy (UBM), as nondestructive and synergistic techniques, for compositional and morphological analyses of tissue grafts, respectively. UBM images and integrated backscatter coefficients demonstrate the ability to visualize and quantify postimplantation changes in vascular graft biomaterials such as loss of the external elastic lamina and intimal/medial thickening over the grafted region as well as graft integration with the surrounding tissue. TRFS results show significant changes in spectra, average lifetime, and fluorescence decay parameters owing to changes in collagen, elastin, and cellular content between normal and grafted tissue regions. These results lay the foundation for the application of a catheter-based technique for in vivo evaluation of vascular grafts using TRFS and UBM.


Scientific Reports | 2017

In vivo label-free structural and biochemical imaging of coronary arteries using an integrated ultrasound and multispectral fluorescence lifetime catheter system

Julien Bec; Jennifer E. Phipps; Dimitris Gorpas; Dinglong Ma; Hussain Fatakdawala; Kenneth B. Margulies; Jeffrey A. Southard; Laura Marcu

Existing clinical intravascular imaging modalities are not capable of accurate detection of critical plaque pathophysiology in the coronary arteries. This study reports the first intravascular catheter combining intravascular ultrasound (IVUS) with multispectral fluorescence lifetime imaging (FLIm) that enables label-free simultaneous assessment of morphological and biochemical features of coronary vessels in vivo. A 3.7 Fr catheter with a fiber-optic channel was constructed based on a 40u2009MHz clinical IVUS catheter. The ability to safely acquire co-registered FLIm-IVUS data in vivo using Dextran40 solution flushing was demonstrated in swine coronary arteries. FLIm parameters from the arterial wall were consistent with the emission of fluorophores present in healthy arterial wall (collagen, elastin). Additionally, structural and biochemical features from atherosclerotic lesions were acquired in ex vivo human coronary samples and corroborated with histological findings. Current results show that FLIm parameters linked to the amount of structural proteins (e.g. collagen, elastin) and lipids (e.g. foam cells, extracellular lipids) in the first 200u2009μm of the intima provide important biochemical information that can supplement IVUS data for a comprehensive assessment of plaques pathophysiology. The unique FLIm-IVUS system evaluated here has the potential to provide a comprehensive insight into atherosclerotic lesion formation, diagnostics and response to therapy.

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Laura Marcu

University of California

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Julien Bec

University of California

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Dinglong Ma

University of California

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John W. Bishop

University of California

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Yang Sun

University of California

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Jürgen Popp

Leibniz Institute of Photonic Technology

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