Continuous wave electron paramagnetic resonance imaging for in vivo mapping of spin distribution ... more Continuous wave electron paramagnetic resonance imaging for in vivo mapping of spin distribution and spectral shape requires rapid data acquisition. A spectral-spatial imaging technique is presented that provides an order of magnitude reduction in acquisition time, compared to iterative tomographic reprojection. The proposed approach assumes that spectral shapes in the sample are wellapproximated by members from a parametric family of functions. A model is developed for the spectra measured with magnetic field modulation. Parameters defining the spin distribution and spectral shapes are then determined directly from the measurements using maximum a posteriori probability estimation. The approach does not suffer approximation error from limited sweep width of the main magnetic field and explicitly incorporates the variability in signal-to-noise ratio versus strength of magnetic field gradient. The processing technique is experimentally demonstrated on a one-dimensional phantom containing a nitroxide spin label with constant g-factor. Using an L-band EPR spectrometer, spectral shapes and spin distribution are accurately recovered from two projections and a spectral window which is comparable to the maximum linewidth of the sample.
Electron paramagnetic resonance (EPR)-based oximetry is capable of quantifying oxygen content in ... more Electron paramagnetic resonance (EPR)-based oximetry is capable of quantifying oxygen content in samples. However, for a heterogeneous environment with multiple pO 2 values, peak-to-peak linewidth of the composite EPR lineshape does not provide a reliable estimate of the overall pO 2 in the sample. The estimate, depending on the heterogeneity, can be severely biased towards narrow components. To address this issue, we suggest a postprocessing method to recover the linewidth histogram which can be used in estimating meaningful parameters, such as the mean and median pO 2 values. This information, although not as comprehensive as obtained by EPR spectral-spatial imaging, goes beyond what can be generally achieved with conventional EPR spectroscopy. Substantially shorter acquisition times, in comparison to EPR imaging, may prompt its use in clinically relevant models. For validation, simulation and EPR experiment data are presented.
Leukocytes ornithine decarboxylase (ODC) activity was measured in normal individuals and in patie... more Leukocytes ornithine decarboxylase (ODC) activity was measured in normal individuals and in patients with chronic myeloid leukemia (CML) in chronic phase (CML-CP) as well as in accelerated phase (CML-AP), with an aim to examine the role of ODC activity in prognostic evaluation of CML patients. Our results showed that ODC activity was significantly higher in CML-CP (41.02+/-25.57nmol/h per 10(7) cells, P<0.005) and CML-AP (67.71+/-44.42nmol/h per 10(7) cells, P<0.001) patients than in normal subjects (3.12+/-1.34nmol/h per 10(7) cells). Furthermore, patients with CML-AP showed higher ODC activity than CML-CP patients (P<0.005). Patients with CML-CP who converted to accelerated phase within 24 months had higher ODC activity (84.58+/-12.81nmol/h per 10(7) cells) than patients who did not convert to accelerated phase (31.13+/-18.24nmol/h per 10(7) cells). The high value of ODC activity was also associated with less clinico-hematological response. We suggest that ODC activity reflects the neoplastic proliferative activity in CML patients and may serve as an additional prognostic marker.
Continuous wave electron paramagnetic resonance imaging for in vivo mapping of spin distribution ... more Continuous wave electron paramagnetic resonance imaging for in vivo mapping of spin distribution and spectral shape requires rapid data acquisition. A spectral-spatial imaging technique is presented that provides an order of magnitude reduction in acquisition time, compared to iterative tomographic reprojection. The proposed approach assumes that spectral shapes in the sample are wellapproximated by members from a parametric family of functions. A model is developed for the spectra measured with magnetic field modulation. Parameters defining the spin distribution and spectral shapes are then determined directly from the measurements using maximum a posteriori probability estimation. The approach does not suffer approximation error from limited sweep width of the main magnetic field and explicitly incorporates the variability in signal-to-noise ratio versus strength of magnetic field gradient. The processing technique is experimentally demonstrated on a one-dimensional phantom containing a nitroxide spin label with constant g-factor. Using an L-band EPR spectrometer, spectral shapes and spin distribution are accurately recovered from two projections and a spectral window which is comparable to the maximum linewidth of the sample.
Electron paramagnetic resonance (EPR)-based oximetry is capable of quantifying oxygen content in ... more Electron paramagnetic resonance (EPR)-based oximetry is capable of quantifying oxygen content in samples. However, for a heterogeneous environment with multiple pO 2 values, peak-to-peak linewidth of the composite EPR lineshape does not provide a reliable estimate of the overall pO 2 in the sample. The estimate, depending on the heterogeneity, can be severely biased towards narrow components. To address this issue, we suggest a postprocessing method to recover the linewidth histogram which can be used in estimating meaningful parameters, such as the mean and median pO 2 values. This information, although not as comprehensive as obtained by EPR spectral-spatial imaging, goes beyond what can be generally achieved with conventional EPR spectroscopy. Substantially shorter acquisition times, in comparison to EPR imaging, may prompt its use in clinically relevant models. For validation, simulation and EPR experiment data are presented.
Leukocytes ornithine decarboxylase (ODC) activity was measured in normal individuals and in patie... more Leukocytes ornithine decarboxylase (ODC) activity was measured in normal individuals and in patients with chronic myeloid leukemia (CML) in chronic phase (CML-CP) as well as in accelerated phase (CML-AP), with an aim to examine the role of ODC activity in prognostic evaluation of CML patients. Our results showed that ODC activity was significantly higher in CML-CP (41.02+/-25.57nmol/h per 10(7) cells, P<0.005) and CML-AP (67.71+/-44.42nmol/h per 10(7) cells, P<0.001) patients than in normal subjects (3.12+/-1.34nmol/h per 10(7) cells). Furthermore, patients with CML-AP showed higher ODC activity than CML-CP patients (P<0.005). Patients with CML-CP who converted to accelerated phase within 24 months had higher ODC activity (84.58+/-12.81nmol/h per 10(7) cells) than patients who did not convert to accelerated phase (31.13+/-18.24nmol/h per 10(7) cells). The high value of ODC activity was also associated with less clinico-hematological response. We suggest that ODC activity reflects the neoplastic proliferative activity in CML patients and may serve as an additional prognostic marker.
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Papers by Rizwan Ahmad