Mads Sloth Vinding
Aarhus University
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Publication
Featured researches published by Mads Sloth Vinding.
Journal of Magnetic Resonance | 2013
Mads Sloth Vinding; Christoffer Laustsen; Ivan I. Maximov; Lise Vejby Søgaard; Jan Henrik Ardenkjaer-Larsen; Niels Chr. Nielsen
Aimed at (13)C metabolic magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) and spectroscopy (MRS) applications, we demonstrate that dynamic nuclear polarization (DNP) may be combined with optimal control 2D spatial selection to simultaneously obtain high sensitivity and well-defined spatial restriction. This is achieved through the development of spatial-selective single-shot spiral-readout MRI and MRS experiments combined with dynamic nuclear polarization hyperpolarized [1-(13)C]pyruvate on a 4.7 T pre-clinical MR scanner. The method stands out from related techniques by facilitating anatomic shaped region-of-interest (ROI) single metabolite signals available for higher image resolution or single-peak spectra. The 2D spatial-selective rf pulses were designed using a novel Krotov-based optimal control approach capable of iteratively fast providing successful pulse sequences in the absence of qualified initial guesses. The technique may be important for early detection of abnormal metabolism, monitoring disease progression, and drug research.
PLOS ONE | 2012
Kristian W. Sanggaard; Carl Chr Danielsen; Lise Wogensen; Mads Sloth Vinding; Louise Munk Rydtoft; Martin Bødtker Mortensen; Henrik Karring; Niels Christian Nielsen; Tobias Wang; Ida B. Thøgersen; Jan J. Enghild
Autotomy refers to the voluntary shedding of a body part; a renowned example is tail loss among lizards as a response to attempted predation. Although many aspects of lizard tail autotomy have been studied, the detailed morphology and mechanism remains unclear. In the present study, we showed that tail shedding by the Tokay gecko (Gekko gecko) and the associated extracellular matrix (ECM) rupture were independent of proteolysis. Instead, lizard caudal autotomy relied on biological adhesion facilitated by surface microstructures. Results based on bio-imaging techniques demonstrated that the tail of Gekko gecko was pre-severed at distinct sites and that its structural integrity depended on the adhesion between these segments.
Carbohydrate Polymers | 2016
Hieu Vu-Quang; Mads Sloth Vinding; Dan Xia; Thomas Nielsen; Marcus Görge Ullisch; Mingdong Dong; Niels Chr. Nielsen; Jørgen Kjems
Noninvasive therapeutic cell tracking methods in living animals are important for understanding cell function and fate in connection with cell therapy. Here we report a new particle system based on chitosan-coated poly(lactic-co-glycolic acid) perfluorooctyl bromide (PLGA PFOB) nanoparticles designed for (19)F magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) cell tracking. Chitosan was adsorbed onto the PLGA PFOB nanoparticles through electric interactions, which led to an increase in the hydrodynamic size and a surface charge proportional to the coating weight ratio. Confocal laser scanning microscopy, flow cytometry analysis and (19)F-MRI showed that to achieve the highest labeling efficiency in vitro, the optimal weight ratio of chitosan to the PLGA PFOB nanoparticles was 1:10 for human mesenchymal stem cells (hMSCs) and 1:100 for Raw 264.7 macrophages. In vivo(19)F-MRI showed that (19)F labeled hMSCs remained at the injected site 24h after injection. Thus, this study validates that chitosan-coated PLGA PFOB nanoparticles have the potential to track cell migration in vivo.
Analytical Chemistry | 2014
M.K. Sørensen; Mads Sloth Vinding; Oleg N. Bakharev; Tomas Nesgaard; Ole B. Jensen; Niels Chr. Nielsen
A mobile, low-field nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR) sensor for onboard, inline detection of catalytic fines in fuel oil in the shipping industry is presented as an alternative to onshore laboratory measurements. Catalytic fines (called cat fines) are aluminosilicate zeolite catalysts utilized in the oil cracking process at refineries. When present in fuel oil, cat fines cause abrasive wear of engine parts and may ultimately lead to engine breakdown with large economical consequences, thereby motivating methods for inline measurements. Here, we report on a robust, mobile, and low-cost (27)Al NMR sensor for continuous online measurement of the level of catalytic fines in fuel oil onboard ships. The sensor enables accurate measurements of aluminum (catalytic fines) in ppm concentrations in good agreement with commercial laboratory reference measurements.
Journal of Magnetic Resonance | 2015
Ivan I. Maximov; Mads Sloth Vinding; Desmond H. Y. Tse; Niels Chr. Nielsen; N. Jon Shah
There is an increasing need for development of advanced radio-frequency (RF) pulse techniques in modern magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) systems driven by recent advancements in ultra-high magnetic field systems, new parallel transmit/receive coil designs, and accessible powerful computational facilities. 2D spatially selective RF pulses are an example of advanced pulses that have many applications of clinical relevance, e.g., reduced field of view imaging, and MR spectroscopy. The 2D spatially selective RF pulses are mostly generated and optimised with numerical methods that can handle vast controls and multiple constraints. With this study we aim at demonstrating that numerical, optimal control (OC) algorithms are efficient for the design of 2D spatially selective MRI experiments, when robustness towards e.g. field inhomogeneity is in focus. We have chosen three popular OC algorithms; two which are gradient-based, concurrent methods using first- and second-order derivatives, respectively; and a third that belongs to the sequential, monotonically convergent family. We used two experimental models: a water phantom, and an in vivo human head. Taking into consideration the challenging experimental setup, our analysis suggests the use of the sequential, monotonic approach and the second-order gradient-based approach as computational speed, experimental robustness, and image quality is key. All algorithms used in this work were implemented in the MATLAB environment and are freely available to the MRI community.
Nanomedicine: Nanotechnology, Biology and Medicine | 2017
Chuanxu Yang; Hieu Vu-Quang; Dina Michelle Unnerup Husum; Stine Julie Tingskov; Mads Sloth Vinding; Thomas Nielsen; Ping Song; Niels Chr. Nielsen; Rikke Nørregaard; Jørgen Kjems
In this work, a theranostic nanoparticle was developed for multimodal imaging and siRNA delivery. The core of the nanoparticles (NP) was formed by encapsulation of superparamagnetic iron oxides and indocyanine green in a PLGA matrix to serve as a multimodal probe for near-infrared (NIFR) and magnetic resonance (MR) imaging. The surface of the particle was coated with polyethylenimine (PEI) for siRNA delivery. Macrophages efficiently took up the nanoparticles and emitted strong NIFR and MR contrast. When transfected with siRNA targeting the pro-inflammatory enzyme cyclooxygenase-2 (COX-2), significant down-regulation of COX-2 was achieved in activated macrophages. Furthermore, after injection into a unilateral ureteral obstruction (UUO)-induced kidney injury model, NIFR and MRI imaging revealed accumulation of nanoparticles in the injury kidney. In addition, in vivo silencing of COX-2 was achieved by NP/PEI/siCOX-2, which further attenuated kidney injury. Our theranostic platform represents a promising approach for simultaneous diagnosis and treatment of inflammatory diseases.
Magnetic Resonance in Medicine | 2017
Mads Sloth Vinding; Bastien Guerin; Thomas Vosegaard; Niels Chr. Nielsen
To present a constrained optimal‐control (OC) framework for designing large‐flip‐angle parallel‐transmit (pTx) pulses satisfying hardware peak‐power as well as regulatory local and global specific‐absorption‐rate (SAR) limits. The application is 2D and 3D spatial‐selective 90° and 180° pulses.
Magnetic Resonance in Medicine | 2014
Christoffer Laustsen; Sean Bowen; Mads Sloth Vinding; Niels Chr. Nielsen; Jan Henrik Ardenkjaer-Larsen
The use of hyperpolarization to enhance the sensitivity of MRI has so far been limited by the decay of the polarization through T1 relaxation. Recently, methods have been proposed that extend the lifetime of the hyperpolarization by storing the spin order in slowly relaxing singlet states.
Magnetic Resonance Materials in Physics Biology and Medicine | 2017
Mads Sloth Vinding; Daniel Brenner; Desmond H.Y. Tse; Sebastian Vellmer; Thomas Vosegaard; Dieter Suter; Tony Stöcker; Ivan I. Maximov
ObjectiveUltrahigh field MRI provides great opportunities for medical diagnostics and research. However, ultrahigh field MRI also brings challenges, such as larger magnetic susceptibility induced field changes. Parallel-transmit radio-frequency pulses can ameliorate these complications while performing advanced tasks in routine applications. To address one class of such pulses, we propose an optimal-control algorithm as a tool for designing advanced multi-dimensional, large flip-angle, radio-frequency pulses. We contrast initial conditions, constraints, and field correction abilities against increasing pulse trajectory acceleration factors.Materials and methodsOn an 8-channel 7T system, we demonstrate the quasi-Newton algorithm with pulse designs for reduced field-of-view imaging with an oil phantom and in vivo with scans of the human brain stem. We used echo-planar imaging with 2D spatial-selective pulses. Pulses are computed sufficiently rapid for routine applications.ResultsOur dataset was quantitatively analyzed with the conventional mean-square-error metric and the structural-similarity index from image processing. Analysis of both full and reduced field-of-view scans benefit from utilizing both complementary measures.ConclusionWe obtained excellent outer-volume suppression with our proposed method, thus enabling reduced field-of-view imaging using pulse trajectory acceleration factors up to 4.
Journal of Magnetic Resonance | 2016
Mads Sloth Vinding; Tommy O. Kessler; Thomas Vosegaard
A low-cost single-crystal NMR kit is presented along with a web-based post-processing software. The kit consists of a piezo-crystal motor and a goniometer for the crystal, both embedded in a standard wide-bore NMR probe with a 3D printed scaffold. The NMR pulse program controls the angle setting automatically, and the post-processing software incorporates a range of orientation-angle discrepancies present in the kit and other single-crystal setups. Results with a NaNO3 single-crystal show a high degree of reproducibility and excellent agreement with previous findings for the anisotropic quadrupolar interaction.