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Dive into the research topics where Sava Sakadzic is active.

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Featured researches published by Sava Sakadzic.


ACS Applied Materials & Interfaces | 2009

Dendritic Phosphorescent Probes for Oxygen Imaging in Biological Systems

Artem Y. Lebedev; Andrei V. Cheprakov; Sava Sakadzic; David A. Boas; David F. Wilson; Sergei A. Vinogradov

Oxygen levels in biological systems can be measured by the phosphorescence quenching method using probes with controllable quenching parameters and defined biodistributions. We describe a general approach to the construction of phosphorescent nanosensors with tunable spectral characteristics, variable degrees of quenching, and a high selectivity for oxygen. The probes are based on bright phosphorescent Pt and Pd complexes of porphyrins and symmetrically pi-extended porphyrins (tetrabenzoporphyrins and tetranaphthoporphyrins). pi-Extension of the core macrocycle allows tuning of the spectral parameters of the probes in order to meet the requirements of a particular imaging application (e.g., oxygen tomography versus planar microscopic imaging). Metalloporphyrins are encapsulated into poly(arylglycine) dendrimers, which fold in aqueous environments and create diffusion barriers for oxygen, making it possible to regulate the sensitivity and the dynamic range of the method. The periphery of the dendrimers is modified with poly(ethylene glycol) residues, which enhance the probes solubility, diminish toxicity, and help prevent interactions of the probes with the biological environment. The probes parameters were measured under physiological conditions and shown to be unaffected by the presence of biomacromolecules. The performance of the probes was demonstrated in applications, including in vivo microscopy of vascular pO(2) in the rat brain.


The Journal of Neuroscience | 2013

In vivo Stimulus-Induced Vasodilation Occurs without IP3 Receptor Activation and May Precede Astrocytic Calcium Increase

Krystal Nizar; Hana Uhlirova; Peifang Tian; Payam A. Saisan; Qun Cheng; Lidia Reznichenko; Kimberly L. Weldy; Tyler Steed; Vishnu B. Sridhar; Christopher L. MacDonald; Jianxia Cui; Sergey L. Gratiy; Sava Sakadzic; David A. Boas; Thomas Ibsa Beka; Gaute T. Einevoll; Ju Chen; Eliezer Masliah; Anders M. Dale; Gabriel A. Silva; Anna Devor

Calcium-dependent release of vasoactive gliotransmitters is widely assumed to trigger vasodilation associated with rapid increases in neuronal activity. Inconsistent with this hypothesis, intact stimulus-induced vasodilation was observed in inositol 1,4,5-triphosphate (IP3) type-2 receptor (R2) knock-out (KO) mice, in which the primary mechanism of astrocytic calcium increase—the release of calcium from intracellular stores following activation of an IP3-dependent pathway—is lacking. Further, our results in wild-type (WT) mice indicate that in vivo onset of astrocytic calcium increase in response to sensory stimulus could be considerably delayed relative to the simultaneously measured onset of arteriolar dilation. Delayed calcium increases in WT mice were observed in both astrocytic cell bodies and perivascular endfeet. Thus, astrocytes may not play a role in the initiation of blood flow response, at least not via calcium-dependent mechanisms. Moreover, an increase in astrocytic intracellular calcium was not required for normal vasodilation in the IP3R2-KO animals.


The Journal of Neuroscience | 2011

“Overshoot” of O2 Is Required to Maintain Baseline Tissue Oxygenation at Locations Distal to Blood Vessels

Anna Devor; Sava Sakadzic; Payam A. Saisan; Mohammad A. Yaseen; Emmanuel Roussakis; Vivek J. Srinivasan; Sergei A. Vinogradov; Bruce R. Rosen; Richard B. Buxton; Anders M. Dale; David A. Boas

In vivo imaging of cerebral tissue oxygenation is important in defining healthy physiology and pathological departures associated with cerebral disease. We used a recently developed two-photon microscopy method, based on a novel phosphorescent nanoprobe, to image tissue oxygenation in the rat primary sensory cortex in response to sensory stimulation. Our measurements showed that a stimulus-evoked increase in tissue pO2 depended on the baseline pO2 level. In particular, during sustained stimulation, the steady-state pO2 at low-baseline locations remained at the baseline, despite large pO2 increases elsewhere. In contrast to the steady state, where pO2 never decreased below the baseline, transient decreases occurred during the “initial dip” and “poststimulus undershoot.” These results suggest that the increase in blood oxygenation during the hemodynamic response, which has been perceived as a paradox, may serve to prevent a sustained oxygenation drop at tissue locations that are remote from the vascular feeding sources.


Applied Optics | 2009

Simultaneous imaging of cerebral partial pressure of oxygen and blood flow during functional activation and cortical spreading depression

Sava Sakadzic; Shuai Yuan; Ergin Dilekoz; Svetlana Ruvinskaya; Sergei A. Vinogradov; Cenk Ayata; David A. Boas

We developed a novel imaging technique that provides real-time two-dimensional maps of the absolute partial pressure of oxygen and relative cerebral blood flow in rats by combining phosphorescence lifetime imaging with laser speckle contrast imaging. Direct measurement of blood oxygenation based on phosphorescence lifetime is not significantly affected by changes in the optical parameters of the tissue during the experiment. The potential of the system as a novel tool for quantitative analysis of the dynamic delivery of oxygen to support brain metabolism was demonstrated in rats by imaging cortical responses to forepaw stimulation and the propagation of cortical spreading depression waves. This new instrument will enable further study of neurovascular coupling in normal and diseased brain.


Optics Letters | 2009

Depth-resolved microscopy of cortical hemodynamics with optical coherence tomography

Vivek J. Srinivasan; Sava Sakadzic; Iwona Gorczynska; Svetlana Ruvinskaya; Weicheng Wu; James G. Fujimoto; David A. Boas

We describe depth-resolved microscopy of cortical hemodynamics with high-speed spectral/Fourier domain optical coherence tomography (OCT). Stimulus-evoked changes in blood vessel diameter, flow, and total hemoglobin were measured in the rat somatosensory cortex. The results show OCT measurements of hemodynamic changes during functional activation and represent an important step toward understanding functional hyperemia at the microscopic level.


Optics Express | 2008

Multi-photon microscopy with a low-cost and highly efficient Cr:LiCAF laser.

Sava Sakadzic; Umit Demirbas; Thorsten R. Mempel; Anna Moore; Svetlana Ruvinskaya; David A. Boas; Alphan Sennaroglu; Franz X. Kaertner; James G. Fujimoto

Multi-photon microscopy (MPM) is a powerful tool for biomedical imaging, enabling molecular contrast and integrated structural and functional imaging on the cellular and subcellular level. However, the cost and complexity of femtosecond laser sources that are required in MPM are significant hurdles to widespread adoption of this important imaging modality. In this work, we describe femtosecond diode pumped Cr:LiCAF laser technology as a low cost alternative to femtosecond Ti:Sapphire lasers for MPM. Using single mode pump diodes which cost only


Optics Letters | 2007

Imaging optically scattering objects with ultrasound-modulated optical tomography

Sri-Rajasekhar Kothapalli; Sava Sakadzic; Chulhong Kim; Lihong V. Wang

150 each, a diode pumped Cr:LiCAF laser generates approximately 70-fs duration, 1.8-nJ pulses at approximately 800 nm wavelengths, with a repetition rate of 100 MHz and average output power of 180 mW. Representative examples of MPM imaging in neuroscience, immunology, endocrinology and cancer research using Cr:LiCAF laser technology are presented. These studies demonstrate the potential of this laser source for use in a broad range of MPM applications.


Journal of Cerebral Blood Flow and Metabolism | 2016

Effect of electrical forepaw stimulation on capillary transit-time heterogeneity (CTH)

Eugenio Gutiérrez-Jiménez; Changsi Cai; Irene Klærke Mikkelsen; Peter M. Rasmussen; Hugo Angleys; Mads Merrild; Kim Mouridsen; Sune Nørhøj Jespersen; Jonghwan Lee; Nina Iversen; Sava Sakadzic; Leif Østergaard

We show the feasibility of imaging objects having different optical scattering coefficients relative to the surrounding scattering medium using ultrasound-modulated optical tomography (UOT). While the spatial resolution depends on ultrasound parameters, the image contrast depends on the difference in scattering coefficient between the object and the surrounding medium. Experimental measurements obtained with a CCD-based speckle contrast detection scheme are in agreement with Monte Carlo simulations and analytical calculations. This study complements previous UOT experiments that demonstrated optical absorption contrast.


NeuroImage | 2017

Magnetic resonance fingerprinting based on realistic vasculature in mice

Philippe Pouliot; Louis Gagnon; Tina Lam; Pramod K. Avti; Chris V. Bowen; Michèle Desjardins; Ashok K. Kakkar; Eric Thorin; Sava Sakadzic; David A. Boas; Frédéric Lesage

Functional hyperemia reduces oxygen extraction efficacy unless counteracted by a reduction of capillary transit-time heterogeneity of blood. We adapted a bolus tracking approach to capillary transit-time heterogeneity estimation for two-photon microscopy and then quantified changes in plasma mean transit time and capillary transit-time heterogeneity during forepaw stimulation in anesthetized mice (C57BL/6NTac). In addition, we analyzed transit time coefficient of variance = capillary transit-time heterogeneity/mean transit time, which we expect to remain constant in passive, compliant microvascular networks. Electrical forepaw stimulation reduced, both mean transit time (11.3% ± 1.3%) and capillary transit-time heterogeneity (24.1% ± 3.3%), consistent with earlier literature and model predictions. We observed a coefficient of variance reduction (14.3% ± 3.5%) during functional activation, especially for the arteriolar-to-venular passage. Such coefficient of variance reduction during functional activation suggests homogenization of capillary flows beyond that expected as a passive response to increased blood flow by other stimuli. This finding is consistent with an active neurocapillary coupling mechanism, for example via pericyte dilation. Mean transit time and capillary transit-time heterogeneity reductions were consistent with the relative change inferred from capillary hemodynamics (cell velocity and flux). Our findings support the important role of capillary transit-time heterogeneity in flow-metabolism coupling during functional activation.


Journal of Biophotonics | 2018

Shear‐induced diffusion of red blood cells measured with dynamic light scattering‐optical coherence tomography

Jianbo Tang; Sefik Evren Erdener; Baoqiang Li; Buyin Fu; Sava Sakadzic; Stefan A. Carp; Jonghwan Lee; David A. Boas

ABSTRACT Magnetic resonance fingerprinting (MRF) was recently proposed as a novel strategy for MR data acquisition and analysis. A variant of MRF called vascular MRF (vMRF) followed, that extracted maps of three parameters of physiological importance: cerebral oxygen saturation (SatO2), mean vessel radius and cerebral blood volume (CBV). However, this estimation was based on idealized 2‐dimensional simulations of vascular networks using random cylinders and the empirical Bloch equations convolved with a diffusion kernel. Here we focus on studying the vascular MR fingerprint using real mouse angiograms and physiological values as the substrate for the MR simulations. The MR signal is calculated ab initio with a Monte Carlo approximation, by tracking the accumulated phase from a large number of protons diffusing within the angiogram. We first study the identifiability of parameters in simulations, showing that parameters are fully estimable at realistically high signal‐to‐noise ratios (SNR) when the same angiogram is used for dictionary generation and parameter estimation, but that large biases in the estimates persist when the angiograms are different. Despite these biases, simulations show that differences in parameters remain estimable. We then applied this methodology to data acquired using the GESFIDE sequence with SPIONs injected into 9 young wild type and 9 old atherosclerotic mice. Both the pre injection signal and the ratio of post‐to‐pre injection signals were modeled, using 5‐dimensional dictionaries. The vMRF methodology extracted significant differences in SatO2, mean vessel radius and CBV between the two groups, consistent across brain regions and dictionaries. Further validation work is essential before vMRF can gain wider application. HighlightsModeling GESFIDE fingerprinting from realistic angiograms of microvasculature.Validation with in vivo acquisition in wild‐type and atherosclerotic mice.Evidence of bias in the vMRF extracted parameters, using simulations.However, differences in vMRF extracted parameters are more robust to bias.Group differences observed in cerebral oxygen saturation, mean vessel radius and CBV.

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Anna Devor

University of California

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Anders M. Dale

University of California

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