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Featured researches published by Joseph S. Six.


PLOS ONE | 2012

Pathway to Cryogen Free Production of Hyperpolarized Krypton-83 and Xenon-129

Joseph S. Six; Theodore Hughes-Riley; Karl F. Stupic; Galina E. Pavlovskaya; Thomas Meersmann

Hyperpolarized (hp) 129Xe and hp 83Kr for magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) are typically obtained through spin-exchange optical pumping (SEOP) in gas mixtures with dilute concentrations of the respective noble gas. The usage of dilute noble gases mixtures requires cryogenic gas separation after SEOP, a step that makes clinical and preclinical applications of hp 129Xe MRI cumbersome. For hp 83Kr MRI, cryogenic concentration is not practical due to depolarization that is caused by quadrupolar relaxation in the condensed phase. In this work, the concept of stopped flow SEOP with concentrated noble gas mixtures at low pressures was explored using a laser with 23.3 W of output power and 0.25 nm linewidth. For 129Xe SEOP without cryogenic separation, the highest obtained MR signal intensity from the hp xenon-nitrogen gas mixture was equivalent to that arising from 15.5±1.9% spin polarized 129Xe in pure xenon gas. The production rate of the hp gas mixture, measured at 298 K, was 1.8 cm3/min. For hp 83Kr, the equivalent of 4.4±0.5% spin polarization in pure krypton at a production rate of 2 cm3/min was produced. The general dependency of spin polarization upon gas pressure obtained in stopped flow SEOP is reported for various noble gas concentrations. Aspects of SEOP specific to the two noble gas isotopes are discussed and compared with current theoretical opinions. A non-linear pressure broadening of the Rb D1 transition was observed and taken into account for the qualitative description of the SEOP process.


Journal of Magnetic Resonance | 2013

Cryogenics free production of hyperpolarized 129Xe and 83Kr for biomedical MRI applications

Theodore Hughes-Riley; Joseph S. Six; David M.L. Lilburn; Karl F. Stupic; Alan C. Dorkes; Dominick Shaw; Galina E. Pavlovskaya; Thomas Meersmann

As an alternative to cryogenic gas handling, hyperpolarized (hp) gas mixtures were extracted directly from the spin exchange optical pumping (SEOP) process through expansion followed by compression to ambient pressure for biomedical MRI applications. The omission of cryogenic gas separation generally requires the usage of high xenon or krypton concentrations at low SEOP gas pressures to generate hp (129)Xe or hp (83)Kr with sufficient MR signal intensity for imaging applications. Two different extraction schemes for the hp gasses were explored with focus on the preservation of the nuclear spin polarization. It was found that an extraction scheme based on an inflatable, pressure controlled balloon is sufficient for hp (129)Xe handling, while (83)Kr can efficiently be extracted through a single cycle piston pump. The extraction methods were tested for ex vivo MRI applications with excised rat lungs. Precise mixing of the hp gases with oxygen, which may be of interest for potential in vivo applications, was accomplished during the extraction process using a piston pump. The (83)Kr bulk gas phase T1 relaxation in the mixtures containing more than approximately 1% O2 was found to be slower than that of (129)Xe in corresponding mixtures. The experimental setup also facilitated (129)Xe T1 relaxation measurements as a function of O2 concentration within excised lungs.


Magnetic Resonance Imaging | 2014

Pulmonary MRI contrast using Surface Quadrupolar Relaxation (SQUARE) of hyperpolarized 83Kr

Joseph S. Six; Theodore Hughes-Riley; David M.L. Lilburn; Alan C. Dorkes; Karl F. Stupic; Dominick Shaw; Peter G. Morris; Ian P. Hall; Galina E. Pavlovskaya; Thomas Meersmann

Hyperpolarized 83Kr has previously been demonstrated to enable MRI contrast that is sensitive to the chemical composition of the surface in a porous model system. Methodological advances have lead to a substantial increase in the 83Kr hyperpolarization and the resulting signal intensity. Using the improved methodology for spin exchange optical pumping of isotopically enriched 83Kr, internal anatomical details of ex vivo rodent lung were resolved with hyperpolarized 83Kr MRI after krypton inhalation. Different 83Kr relaxation times were found between the main bronchi and the parenchymal regions in ex vivo rat lungs. The T1 weighted hyperpolarized 83Kr MRI provided a first demonstration of surface quadrupolar relaxation (SQUARE) pulmonary MRI contrast.


PLOS ONE | 2013

Validating Excised Rodent Lungs for Functional Hyperpolarized Xenon-129 MRI

David M.L. Lilburn; Theodore Hughes-Riley; Joseph S. Six; Karl F. Stupic; Dominick Shaw; Galina E. Pavlovskaya; Thomas Meersmann

Ex vivo rodent lung models are explored for physiological measurements of respiratory function with hyperpolarized (hp) 129Xe MRI. It is shown that excised lung models allow for simplification of the technical challenges involved and provide valuable physiological insights that are not feasible using in vivo MRI protocols. A custom designed breathing apparatus enables MR images of gas distribution on increasing ventilation volumes of actively inhaled hp 129Xe. Straightforward hp 129Xe MRI protocols provide residual lung volume (RV) data and permit for spatially resolved tracking of small hp 129Xe probe volumes during the inhalation cycle. Hp 129Xe MRI of lung function in the excised organ demonstrates the persistence of post mortem airway responsiveness to intravenous methacholine challenges. The presented methodology enables physiology of lung function in health and disease without additional regulatory approval requirements and reduces the technical and logistical challenges with hp gas MRI experiments. The post mortem lung functional data can augment histological measurements and should be of interest for drug development studies.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2016

Molecular hydrogen and catalytic combustion in the production of hyperpolarized 83Kr and 129Xe MRI contrast agents

Nicola J. Rogers; Fraser Hill-Casey; Karl F. Stupic; Joseph S. Six; Clémentine Lesbats; Sean P. Rigby; J. Fraissard; Galina E. Pavlovskaya; Thomas Meersmann

Significance The high signal intensity associated with magnetic resonance of hyperpolarized 129Xe has enabled countless applications ranging from materials science to biomedical MRI of the lung and brain. New modalities are constantly emerging; for example, hyperpolarized 129Xe biosensors are of potential interest for molecular imaging of biomarker distribution in organs. Hyperpolarized 83Kr shows promise as novel surface-sensitive contrast agent for pulmonary MRI but previous work was limited to excised lungs. This work reports a previously unexplored approach in the generation of hyperpolarized contrast agents that makes highly concentrated hyperpolarized 83Kr available for the first time, to our knowledge. The results also provide the basis for on-demand flow production of highly concentrated hyperpolarized 129Xe for in situ process monitoring and in vivo molecular imaging. Hyperpolarized (hp) 83Kr is a promising MRI contrast agent for the diagnosis of pulmonary diseases affecting the surface of the respiratory zone. However, the distinct physical properties of 83Kr that enable unique MRI contrast also complicate the production of hp 83Kr. This work presents a previously unexplored approach in the generation of hp 83Kr that can likewise be used for the production of hp 129Xe. Molecular nitrogen, typically used as buffer gas in spin-exchange optical pumping (SEOP), was replaced by molecular hydrogen without penalty for the achievable hyperpolarization. In this particular study, the highest obtained nuclear spin polarizations were P = 29% for 83Kr and P = 63% for 129Xe. The results were reproduced over many SEOP cycles despite the laser-induced on-resonance formation of rubidium hydride (RbH). Following SEOP, the H2 was reactively removed via catalytic combustion without measurable losses in hyperpolarized spin state of either 83Kr or 129Xe. Highly spin-polarized 83Kr can now be purified for the first time, to our knowledge, to provide high signal intensity for the advancement of in vivo hp 83Kr MRI. More generally, a chemical reaction appears as a viable alternative to the cryogenic separation process, the primary purification method of hp 129Xe for the past 2 1/2 decades. The inherent simplicity of the combustion process will facilitate hp 129Xe production and should allow for on-demand continuous flow of purified and highly spin-polarized 129Xe.


Magnetic Resonance in Medicine | 2016

Investigating lung responses with functional hyperpolarized xenon-129 MRI in an ex vivo rat model of asthma

David M.L. Lilburn; Amanda L. Tatler; Joseph S. Six; Clémentine Lesbats; Anthony Habgood; Joanne Porte; Theodore Hughes-Riley; Dominick Shaw; Gisli Jenkins; Thomas Meersmann

Asthma is a disease of increasing worldwide importance that calls for new investigative methods. Ex vivo lung tissue is being increasingly used to study functional respiratory parameters independent of confounding systemic considerations but also to reduce animal numbers and associated research costs. In this work, a straightforward laboratory method is advanced to probe dynamic changes in gas inhalation patterns by using an ex vivo small animal ovalbumin (OVA) model of human asthma.


Journal of the Royal Society Interface | 2015

Hyperpolarized 83Kr magnetic resonance imaging of alveolar degradation in a rat model of emphysema

David M.L. Lilburn; Clémentine Lesbats; Joseph S. Six; Eric Dubuis; Liang Yew-Booth; Dominick Shaw; Maria G. Belvisi; Mark A. Birrell; Galina E. Pavlovskaya; Thomas Meersmann

Hyperpolarized 83Kr surface quadrupolar relaxation (SQUARE) generates MRI contrast that was previously shown to correlate with surface-to-volume ratios in porous model surface systems. The underlying physics of SQUARE contrast is conceptually different from any other current MRI methodology as the method uses the nuclear electric properties of the spin I = 9/2 isotope 83Kr. To explore the usage of this non-radioactive isotope for pulmonary pathophysiology, MRI SQUARE contrast was acquired in excised rat lungs obtained from an elastase-induced model of emphysema. A significant 83Kr T1 relaxation time increase in the SQUARE contrast was found in the elastase-treated lungs compared with the baseline data from control lungs. The SQUARE contrast suggests a reduction in pulmonary surface-to-volume ratio in the emphysema model that was validated by histology. The finding supports usage of 83Kr SQUARE as a new biomarker for surface-to-volume ratio changes in emphysema.


PLOS ONE | 2016

Probe-Specific Procedure to Estimate Sensitivity and Detection Limits for 19F Magnetic Resonance Imaging

Alexander Taylor; Josef Granwehr; Clémentine Lesbats; James L. Krupa; Joseph S. Six; Galina E. Pavlovskaya; Neil R. Thomas; Dorothee P. Auer; Thomas Meersmann; Henryk Faas

Due to low fluorine background signal in vivo, 19F is a good marker to study the fate of exogenous molecules by magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) using equilibrium nuclear spin polarization schemes. Since 19F MRI applications require high sensitivity, it can be important to assess experimental feasibility during the design stage already by estimating the minimum detectable fluorine concentration. Here we propose a simple method for the calibration of MRI hardware, providing sensitivity estimates for a given scanner and coil configuration. An experimental “calibration factor” to account for variations in coil configuration and hardware set-up is specified. Once it has been determined in a calibration experiment, the sensitivity of an experiment or, alternatively, the minimum number of required spins or the minimum marker concentration can be estimated without the need for a pilot experiment. The definition of this calibration factor is derived based on standard equations for the sensitivity in magnetic resonance, yet the method is not restricted by the limited validity of these equations, since additional instrument-dependent factors are implicitly included during calibration. The method is demonstrated using MR spectroscopy and imaging experiments with different 19F samples, both paramagnetically and susceptibility broadened, to approximate a range of realistic environments.


Physical Chemistry Chemical Physics | 2013

Combustion resistance of the 129Xe hyperpolarized nuclear spin state

Karl F. Stupic; Joseph S. Six; Michael Olsen; Galina E. Pavlovskaya; Thomas Meersmann


Aiche Journal | 2015

NMR Imaging of Low Pressure, Gas-Phase Transport in Packed Beds Using Hyperpolarized Xenon-129

Galina E. Pavlovskaya; Joseph S. Six; Thomas Meersman; Navin Gopinathan; Sean P. Rigby

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Dominick Shaw

University of Nottingham

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Karl F. Stupic

University of Nottingham

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Eric Dubuis

Imperial College London

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Liang Yew-Booth

National Institutes of Health

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Alan C. Dorkes

University of Nottingham

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