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Dive into the research topics where Steven Sensarn is active.

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Featured researches published by Steven Sensarn.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2013

A Raman-based endoscopic strategy for multiplexed molecular imaging

Cristina Zavaleta; Ellis Garai; Jonathan T. C. Liu; Steven Sensarn; Michael J. Mandella; Dominique Van de Sompel; Shai Friedland; Jacques Van Dam; Christopher H. Contag; Sanjiv S. Gambhir

Endoscopic imaging is an invaluable diagnostic tool allowing minimally invasive access to tissues deep within the body. It has played a key role in screening colon cancer and is credited with preventing deaths through the detection and removal of precancerous polyps. However, conventional white-light endoscopy offers physicians structural information without the biochemical information that would be advantageous for early detection and is essential for molecular typing. To address this unmet need, we have developed a unique accessory, noncontact, fiber optic-based Raman spectroscopy device that has the potential to provide real-time, multiplexed functional information during routine endoscopy. This device is ideally suited for detection of functionalized surface-enhanced Raman scattering (SERS) nanoparticles as molecular imaging contrast agents. This device was designed for insertion through a clinical endoscope and has the potential to detect and quantify the presence of a multiplexed panel of tumor-targeting SERS nanoparticles. Characterization of the Raman instrument was performed with SERS particles on excised human tissue samples, and it has shown unsurpassed sensitivity and multiplexing capabilities, detecting 326-fM concentrations of SERS nanoparticles and unmixing 10 variations of colocalized SERS nanoparticles. Another unique feature of our noncontact Raman endoscope is that it has been designed for efficient use over a wide range of working distances from 1 to 10 mm. This is necessary to accommodate for imperfect centering during endoscopy and the nonuniform surface topology of human tissue. Using this endoscope as a key part of a multiplexed detection approach could allow endoscopists to distinguish between normal and precancerous tissues rapidly and to identify flat lesions that are otherwise missed.


PLOS ONE | 2015

A Real-Time Clinical Endoscopic System for Intraluminal, Multiplexed Imaging of Surface-Enhanced Raman Scattering Nanoparticles

Ellis Garai; Steven Sensarn; Cristina Zavaleta; Nathan O. Loewke; Stephan Rogalla; Michael J. Mandella; Stephen A. Felt; Shai Friedland; Jonathan T. C. Liu; Sanjiv S. Gambhir; Christopher H. Contag

The detection of biomarker-targeting surface-enhanced Raman scattering (SERS) nanoparticles (NPs) in the human gastrointestinal tract has the potential to improve early cancer detection; however, a clinically relevant device with rapid Raman-imaging capability has not been described. Here we report the design and in vivo demonstration of a miniature, non-contact, opto-electro-mechanical Raman device as an accessory to clinical endoscopes that can provide multiplexed molecular data via a panel of SERS NPs. This device enables rapid circumferential scanning of topologically complex luminal surfaces of hollow organs (e.g., colon and esophagus) and produces quantitative images of the relative concentrations of SERS NPs that are present. Human and swine studies have demonstrated the speed and simplicity of this technique. This approach also offers unparalleled multiplexing capabilities by simultaneously detecting the unique spectral fingerprints of multiple SERS NPs. Therefore, this new screening strategy has the potential to improve diagnosis and to guide therapy by enabling sensitive quantitative molecular detection of small and otherwise hard-to-detect lesions in the context of white-light endoscopy.


ACS Nano | 2015

Atherosclerotic plaque targeting mechanism of long-circulating nanoparticles established by multimodal imaging.

Mark E. Lobatto; Claudia Calcagno; Antoine Millon; Max L. Senders; Francois Fay; Philip M. Robson; Tina Binderup; Maarten P.M. Paridaans; Steven Sensarn; Stephan Rogalla; Ronald E. Gordon; Luis Cardoso; Gert Storm; Josbert M. Metselaar; Christopher H. Contag; Erik S.G. Stroes; Zahi A. Fayad; Willem J. M. Mulder

Atherosclerosis is a major cause of global morbidity and mortality that could benefit from novel targeted therapeutics. Recent studies have shown efficient and local drug delivery with nanoparticles, although the nanoparticle targeting mechanism for atherosclerosis has not yet been fully elucidated. Here we used in vivo and ex vivo multimodal imaging to examine permeability of the vessel wall and atherosclerotic plaque accumulation of fluorescently labeled liposomal nanoparticles in a rabbit model. We found a strong correlation between permeability as established by in vivo dynamic contrast enhanced magnetic resonance imaging and nanoparticle plaque accumulation with subsequent nanoparticle distribution throughout the vessel wall. These key observations will enable the development of nanotherapeutic strategies for atherosclerosis.


Journal of Biomedical Optics | 2013

High-sensitivity, real-time, ratiometric imaging of surface-enhanced Raman scattering nanoparticles with a clinically translatable Raman endoscope device.

Ellis Garai; Steven Sensarn; Cristina Zavaleta; Dominique Van de Sompel; Nathan O. Loewke; Michael J. Mandella; Sanjiv S. Gambhir; Christopher H. Contag

Abstract. Topical application and quantification of targeted, surface-enhanced Raman scattering (SERS) nanoparticles offer a new technique that has the potential for early detection of epithelial cancers of hollow organs. Although less toxic than intravenous delivery, the additional washing required to remove unbound nanoparticles cannot necessarily eliminate nonspecific pooling. Therefore, we developed a real-time, ratiometric imaging technique to determine the relative concentrations of at least two spectrally unique nanoparticle types, where one serves as a nontargeted control. This approach improves the specific detection of bound, targeted nanoparticles by adjusting for working distance and for any nonspecific accumulation following washing. We engineered hardware and software to acquire SERS signals and ratios in real time and display them via a graphical user interface. We report quantitative, ratiometric imaging with nanoparticles at pM and sub-pM concentrations and at varying working distances, up to 50 mm. Additionally, we discuss optimization of a Raman endoscope by evaluating the effects of lens material and fiber coating on background noise, and theoretically modeling and simulating collection efficiency at various working distances. This work will enable the development of a clinically translatable, noncontact Raman endoscope capable of rapidly scanning large, topographically complex tissue surfaces for small and otherwise hard to detect lesions.


Physical Review Letters | 2009

Observation of Nonlocal Modulation with Entangled Photons

Steven Sensarn; G. Y. Yin; S. E. Harris

We demonstrate a new type of quantum mechanical correlation where phase modulators at distant locations, acting on the photons of an entangled pair, interfere to determine the apparent depth of modulation. When the modulators have the same phase, the modulation depth doubles; when oppositely phased, the modulators negate each other.


Optics Letters | 2006

Molecular modulation in a hollow fiber.

Steven Sensarn; S. N. Goda; G. Y. Yin; S. E. Harris

We report the extension of the technique of molecular modulation to a deuterium-filled optical fiber. Using driving lasers at 807 and 1064 nm, each with a pulse energy of several millijoules and a 200 microm diameter fiber with a length of 22.5 cm, we generate 12 sidebands with wavelengths spanning 1.56 microm to 254 nm.


PLOS ONE | 2017

The tyrosine kinase inhibitor imatinib mesylate suppresses uric acid crystal-induced acute gouty arthritis in mice

Laurent L. Reber; Philipp Starkl; Bianca Balbino; Riccardo Sibilano; Nicolas Gaudenzio; Stephan Rogalla; Steven Sensarn; Dongmin Kang; Harini Raghu; Jeremy Sokolove; William H. Robinson; Christopher H. Contag; Mindy Tsai; Stephen J. Galli

Gouty arthritis is caused by the deposition of monosodium urate (MSU) crystals in joints. Despite many treatment options for gout, there is a substantial need for alternative treatments for patients unresponsive to current therapies. Tyrosine kinase inhibitors have demonstrated therapeutic benefit in experimental models of antibody-dependent arthritis and in rheumatoid arthritis in humans, but to date, the potential effects of such inhibitors on gouty arthritis has not been evaluated. Here we demonstrate that treatment with the tyrosine kinase inhibitor imatinib mesylate (imatinib) can suppress inflammation induced by injection of MSU crystals into subcutaneous air pouches or into the ankle joint of wild type mice. Moreover, imatinib treatment also largely abolished the lower levels of inflammation which developed in IL-1R1-/- or KitW-sh/W-sh mice, indicating that this drug can inhibit IL-1-independent pathways, as well as mast cell-independent pathways, contributing to pathology in this model. Imatinib treatment not only prevented ankle swelling and synovial inflammation when administered before MSU crystals but also diminished these features when administrated after the injection of MSU crystals, a therapeutic protocol more closely mimicking the clinical situation in which treatment occurs after the development of an acute gout flare. Finally, we also assessed the efficiency of local intra-articular injections of imatinib-loaded poly(lactic-co-glycolic acid) (PLGA) nanoparticles in this model of acute gout. Treatment with low doses of this long-acting imatinib:PLGA formulation was able to reduce ankle swelling in a therapeutic protocol. Altogether, these results raise the possibility that tyrosine kinase inhibitors might have utility in the treatment of acute gout in humans.


Applied Physics Letters | 2007

Coherent control of molecular modulation

S. N. Goda; Steven Sensarn; M. Y. Shverdin; G. Y. Yin

We demonstrate coherent control of a molecular modulation process using an incident set of seven optical sidebands spanning two octaves of bandwidth. We utilize a genetic algorithm to optimize the relative phases of the incident sidebands to generate additional UV sidebands with nearly 1% efficiency, change the ratio of energy between sidebands by more than a factor of 50, and efficiently alter individual sideband energies by millijoules.


Nonlinear Optics: Materials, Fundamentals and Applications | 2009

Resonant Sum Frequency Generation with Biphotons

Steven Sensarn; Irfan Ali-Khan; G. Y. Yin; S. E. Harris

We improve the efficiency of sum frequency generation using entangled photons. By resonating the sum frequency field, we observe generated power which varies linearly with input power and is increased by a factor of 12.


Frontiers in Optics | 2009

Nonlocal Modulation of Biphotons

Steven Sensarn; G. Y. Yin; S. E. Harris

We experimentally describe a new quantum effect where temporal modulation of one photon of an entangled pair, as measured by frequency-domain correlation, may be negated or enhanced by modulation of the second photon.

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