J Photochem Photobiol B
November 2000
The double-logarithmic plot has been employed for the fluorometric analysis of ligand binding. This analysis is valid only for 1:1 binding of a non-aggregating ligand and if the plot is based on the free, and not the total, ligand concentration.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFPhotochem Photobiol
July 2000
Lutetium (III) texaphyrin photosensitizes postirradiation or "delayed" photohemolysis (DPH) of human and bovine red blood cells at 730 nm by a Type-2 pathway mediated by singlet molecular oxygen. The DPH rate increases with increasing incubation temperature and with the second power of the incident fluence. The experimental DPH curves are in good agreement with a multi-hit kinetics model based on target theory.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFA versatile PDT light dosimetry model is described incorporating the effects of drug photobleaching, drug elimination, and normal tissue damage. The dependence of the necrosis depth (dn) on the incident light dose for the four major modes of PDT light delivery has the form: dn = delta loge(DG), where delta is the optical penetration depth of the tumor tissue, D is the ratio of the incident light dose to the energy fluence at the necrosis threshold, and G is a function of the tissue optical constants. Light dosimetry graphs were calculated for Photofrin at standard conditions.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFSensitization of post-irradiation (delayed) photohemolysis (DPH) and "during irradiation" (continuous) photohemolysis (CPH) were investigated for sodium hypericin and Photofrin. The photohemolysis rate and relative steepness of the photohemolysis curves were measured for a range of sensitizer concentrations and DPH irradiation times. The data are analyzed by a multihit model based on the assumption that photohemolysis requires thermal activation of light-activated damage.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThis study evaluates the effect of photodynamic therapy using Photofrin II on prevention and treatment of intimal hyperplasia in a rabbit model of common carotid artery balloon injury. An established model was used. One week after injury (inhibition arm) or 6 weeks after injury (treatment arm), each common carotid artery was exposed to continuous external laser irradiation 48 hours after a 5 mg/kg intravenous dose of Photofrin II (fluency = 7.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFSkin reflection spectra were measured before and 24 h after administration of Photofrin to nevoid basal-cell carcinoma syndrome patients. The presence of the drug reduced the reflectivity of uninvolved skin and increased the reflectivity of erythematous basal cell cancers. Data analysis with diffusion approximation and Monte Carlo simulation were employed to estimate the optical constant changes and localized drug concentration.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFObjective: To study the cytotoxic effect of photodynamic therapy (PDT) on myointimal hyperplasia (MIH) in 120 New Zealand white rabbits using the chromophore chloroaluminum phthalocyanine tetrasulfonate (APtS).
Design: A common carotid artery (CCA) injury model was used to initiate MIH. Photodynamic therapy was administered 1 week after injury (inhibition arm) or 6 weeks after injury (treatment arm).
Photodynamic therapy (PDT) is a new treatment for solid tumors utilizing the combined action of light and a photosensitizing drug. Laser-fiber optic delivery systems make it practical to treat superficial and interstitial cancers, including malignancies of the skin, head and neck, esophagus, endobronchial tract, stomach, urinary bladder, female genital tract, and other sites. The putative action mechanism in PDT involves photochemical destruction of tumor tissue membranes mediated by singlet molecular oxygen.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFArtif Cells Blood Substit Immobil Biotechnol
May 1995
High resolution optical absorption spectra of hemoglobin derivatives in red blood cells and phosphatidylcholine liposomes were calculated from diffuse reflection and transmission spectra by means of the one-dimensional diffusion approximation. The numerical technique of singular value decomposition was used to calculate the composition of red cell and liposome mixtures.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFJ Photochem Photobiol B
December 1994
The singlet oxygen quantum yield (phi delta) for Photofrin solubilized by Triton X-100 was measured in homogeneous and light-scattering media using the photosensitized inactivation of lysozyme as an internal actinometer. Higher values of phi delta at 630 nm than at 514 nm are attributed to the formation of a far-red-absorbing photosensitizing photoproduct.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFPhotodynamic therapy (PDT) with Photofrin II was administered over a 7-year period to 17 patients with recurrent carcinoma in situ (CIS) of the vulva, vagina, and perianum. Ten patients were treated two or three times after average intervening periods of 23 and 19 months, respectively. A histologically complete response at 3 months after the PDT session was achieved for 27 of 38 (71%) anatomic sites.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFPhotosensitization of lysozyme, liposomes, ghosts and intact red blood cells (RBC) was investigated for aqueous hypericin. The effects of azide ion, 1,4-diazabicyclo(2.2.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFAbsorption and fluorescence measurements of purified hypericin (HY) were made in various media. Photosensitization of two aqueous systems was investigated: resealed red blood cell membranes (ghosts) and hen lysozyme (Lys). Solubilization of HY by ghost membranes was shown by means of diffuse reflectance spectroscopy.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFA ray-tracing calculation that uses reflection and transmission coefficients for layers with refractive-index matched boundaries leads to the corresponding coefficients for refractive-index mismatch. The model is compared with Monte Carlo calculations for a range of layer parameters. The absorption by a mismatched layer is higher than the corresponding layer with matched boundaries and relatively insensitive to the extent of scattering anisotropy.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFA light dosimetry model for photodynamic therapy is described leading to the dependence of necrosis depth on incident light dose. Semiempirical dosimetry relations are derived for four modes of light delivery. Results for Photofrin II at 630 nm are summarized in graphical form.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFArch Otolaryngol Head Neck Surg
November 1990
Photodynamic therapy is an experimental modality for tumor treatment based on the combined action of the tumor-localizing agent, ie, hematoporphyrin derivative, and red light. From 1985 through 1989, 26 patients were treated using hematoporphyrin-derived drugs and 630-nm light delivered by a tunable dye laser. All patients had biopsy-proved squamous cell carcinoma of the head and neck, and they had either failed the traditional treatment modalities or refused conventional therapies.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFFlux density distributions were measured in large tissue sections illuminated with 633- and 1064-nm laser radiation delivered by an optical fiber. The results were modeled by solving the 2-D diffusion approximation for an incident Gaussian beam and fitting the data with nonlinear regression. It is shown that the radial average flux density is exponentially attenuated for an arbitrary incident irradiance profile.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFTemperature profiles were measured in large sections of bovine muscle and bovine liver exposed to single pulses from a clinical Nd:YAG laser. The data were analyzed with a photothermal model applicable to an incident gaussian beam including the effects of beam spread and heat flow. Closed form expressions for the radial average initial temperatures and thermal relaxation were derived and compared with the measurements.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFOptical constants of animal and plant tissues were measured over a wide spectral range using an integrating sphere spectrophotometer. The data were analyzed with two formulations of the 1-D diffusion approximation differing in the phase function. The accuracy of the similarity transformation was examined with tissue phantoms incorporating known chromophores in light scattering media.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFPhotosensitization in a light scattering matrix was investigated with a tissue model consisting of polystyrene microsphere scattering particles, in the presence of a Photofrin II as a photosensitizing agent, and subtilisin Carlsberg as an enzyme target. The photodynamic rate constant for irradiation at 435 nm, 545 nm, and red light was measured at different microsphere concentrations. The reaction rate was almost independent of the microspheres, ruling out a significant effect of light scattering on the integrated photosensitization efficiency.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFHyperthermic tumor response induced by 1,064-nm radiation from an Nd:YAG laser was investigated in DBA/2J female mice bearing the SMT-F mammary carcinoma. The measured temperature-depth profiles indicate that hyperthermic temperatures can be achieved in tumors ranging from 3 to 8 mm thick at power inputs on the order of 1 W. For small tumors, a 5-week complete response rate exceeding 50% required 45 minutes at 45.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFPhotochem Photobiol
February 1987
Mechanisms for hematoporphyrin derivative (HPD) localization in malignant tissue and in photodynamic therapy (PDT) have not been established. The authors' experience with human cancer xenografts in nude mice as a tumor system for the experimental study of these mechanisms is described. Human mucosal head and neck squamous cell carcinoma was successfully transplanted to nude mice in 29 per cent of trials and serially passed through multiple generations in three tumor lines.
View Article and Find Full Text PDF