1. Simon, R.H., S.Y. Ho, J.S. D'Arrigo, A. Wakefield, & S.G. Hamilton. (1990). Lipid-coated
ultrastable microbubbles as a contrast agent in neurosonography. Investigative
Radiology 25:1300-1304.
Abstract
Sample Illustrations (with captions):
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2. D'Arrigo, J.S. (1991). Contrast-assisted tumor detection. Drug News & Perspectives 4:164-167.
Abstract
3. D'Arrigo, J.S., R.H. Simon, & S.Y. Ho. (1991). Lipid-coated uniform
microbubbles for earlier sonographic detection of brain tumors. J.
Neuroimaging 1:134-139.
Abstract
Sample Illustrations (with captions):
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4. Simon, R.H., S.Y. Ho, C.R. Perkins, & J.S. D'Arrigo. (1992). A quantitative assessment of
tumor enhancement by ultrastable lipid-coated microbubbles as a contrast agent. Investigative
Radiology 27:29-34.
Abstract
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5. D'Arrigo, J.S., & T. Imae. (1992).
Physical characteristics of ultrastable lipid-coated microbubbles. J.
Colloid & Interface Sci. 149:592-595.
Abstract
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6. D'Arrigo, J.S., S.Y. Ho, & R.H. Simon.
(1993). Detection of experimental rat liver tumors by contrast-assisted
ultrasonography. Investigative Radiology 28:218-222.
Abstract
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7. Huang, W., J.C. Grecula, T.M. Button, D.P. Harrington, M.A. Davis, J.S. D'Arrigo, B.H. Laster, & C.S. Springer. (1993). Use of lipid-coated microbubbles (LCMs) for susceptibility-based MRI contrast in brain tumors. Proceedings of the 12th Annual Meeting of the Society of Magnetic Resonance in Medicine, August 1993, New York, NY.
8. Simon, R.H., S.Y.
Ho, D.F. Uphoff, S.C. Lange, & J.S. D'Arrigo (1993). Applications of
lipid-coated microbubble ultrasonic contrast to tumor therapy. Ultrasound
in Medicine & Biology 19:123-125.
Abstract
9. Barbarese,
E., S.Y. Ho, J.S. D'Arrigo, & R.H. Simon. (1995). Internalization of
microbubbles by tumor cells in vivo and in vitro. J. Neuro-Oncology 26:25-34.
Abstract
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10. Ho, S.Y., E. Barbarese, J.S.
D'Arrigo, C. Smith, & R.H. Simon. (1997). Evaluation of lipid-coated
microbubbles as a delivery vehicle for Taxol in tumor therapy. Neurosurgery
40:1260-1268.
Abstract
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11. Ho, S.Y., X.G. Li, A. Wakefield, E. Barbarese, J.S. D'Arrigo,
& R.H. Simon. (1997). The affinity of lipid-coated microbubbles for
maturing brain injury sites. Brain Res. Bull. 43:543-549.
Abstract
12. Wakefield, A.F., S.Y. Ho, X.G. Li, J.S. D'Arrigo, & R.H. Simon.
(1998). The use of lipid-coated microbubbles as a delivery agent for
7B-hydroxycholesterol to a radiofrequency lesion in the rat brain.
Neurosurgery 42:592-598.
Abstract
13. Kureshi, I.U., S.Y. Ho, H.C. Onyiuke, A.E.
Wakefield, J.S. D'Arrigo, & R.H. Simon. (1999). The affinity of
lipid-coated microbubbles to maturing spinal cord injury sites.
Neurosurgery 44:1047-1053.
Abstract
Dilute gas-in-liquid emulsions, existing in natural waters, represent self-assembled (i.e., "self-organized") coated microbubbles (cf. D'Arrigo, 2010 [in press]) -- and is a topic of great concern to workers in many fields of fundamental and engineering sciences. Specifically, the existence of stable gas microcavities or microbubbles in fresh water, sea water, and other aqueous liquids including physiological fluids has been postulated and/or demonstrated by numerous investigators over the last half century. However, there is far less agreement in the scientific literature as to the predominant physicochemical/biochemical mechanism by which such gas microbubbles, 0.5 ~ 100 µm in diameter, are stabilized. A detailed knowledge of this physicochemical/biochemical stabilization mechanism in aqueous media is of practical importance to numerous and varied fields: hydrodynamic and acoustic cavitation, hydraulic and ocean engineering, waste-water treatment, commercial oil recovery, chemical oceanography, meteorology, marine biology, food technology, and a variety of medical applications including echocardiology, decompression sickness and, more recently, cancer diagnosis and treatment. Many of the above diverse applications (along with the underlying chemical and physical principles or considerations upon which they are based) are described individually in the publications following.
[ NOTE: Many other detailed research studies have been published describing (the structure and/or properties of) OTHER types of "lipid-encapsulated" microbubbles -- but which are NOT modeled primarily from the stabilized microbubbles in natural waters (i.e., do NOT have the same exact molecular composition nor identical properties as Filmix® ). For additional background information (via the free "PubMed" database at www.nlm.nih.gov) and for purposes of comparative review by any interested readers, a partial list of the numerous authors who have published on these OTHER types of "lipid-shell" microbubbles is provided as follows: Allen JS, Anderson T, Block SH, Borden MA, Brandenburger GH, Brayman AA, Bull JL, Bussat P, Carpenter JE, Chomas JE, Christiansen JP, Coggins MP, Crum LA, Dayton PA, de Haen C, de Jong N, Ellegala DB, Erxiong L, Ferrara KW, Fisher NG, French BA, Fritz TA, Gies RA, Gut J, Hilgenfeldt S, Hossack JA, Jayaweera AR, Kaul S, Klibanov AL, Kohno M, Kruse DE, Lancee CT, Lanza GM, Leong-Poi H, Ley K, Lindner JR, Longo M, Marmottant P, Matula T, McDicken WN, Miller DL, Moran CM, Morgan KE, Modzelewski RA, Patel DN, Postema M, Price RJ, Pu G, Pye SD, Runner GJ, Rychak JJ, Sakakima Y, Schneider M, Sboros V, Shaffrey ME, Shortencarier MJ, Skalek TC, Sklenar J, Skyba DM, Song JI, Tachibana K, Tachibana S, Takeuchi H, Taylor RP, ten Cate FJ, Unger EC, van Wamel A, Villanueva FS, Wagner WR, Weller GE, Wickline SA, Wilson SR, Wong MK, Wrigley RH, Yan F.]
xvii) D'Arrigo, J.S. (2020) Nanotargeting of drug(s) for delaying dementia: Relevance of Covid-19 impact on dementia. (Submitted for publication.)
xvi) Ariviyal Publishing (2020) News Release: "Biobased nanocarrier of drug(s) to both ameliorate COVID-19 illness symptomatology and, thereby, delay progression of Alzheimer's disease". (Accepted for publication.)
xv) D'Arrigo, J.S. (2020) Nanotargeting dementia etiology: Aiming drug nanocarriers toward receptors for vascular endothelium, serum amyloid A, inflammasomes, and oxidative stress. Nano Prog., 2(3), 25-30.
xiv) D'Arrigo, J.S. (2020) Biomimetic nanocarrier targeting drug(s) to upstream-receptor mechanisms in dementia: Focusing on linking pathogenic cascades. Biomimetics, 5(1), 11.
xiii) D'Arrigo, J.S. (2020) Biomaterial to improve drug delivery in Alzheimer's disease: Linking major pathogenic pathways. OBM Geriatrics, 4(1), 10.
xii) D'Arrigo, J.S. (2019) Delaying dementia: Targeted brain delivery using lipid cubic phases. OBM Neurobiology 3(3), doi:10.21926/obm.neurobiol.1903040 .
xi) D'Arrigo, J.S. (2019) Treating dementia early: Limiting cellular damage in brain tissue. OBM Geriatrics, 3(2), 19.
x) D'Arrigo, J.S. (2019) Nanotherapy to delay cognitive impairment: Using colloidal nanocarriers to block amyloid-beta-induced damage in brain cell membranes. SDRP J. Nanotech. Mat. Sci., 2(1), 94-105.
ix) D'Arrigo, J.S. (2018) Dementia Confidential: Aiming for Normal Aging, versus Dementia. 74 pp.; Lambert Academic Publishing, Germany.
viii) D'Arrigo, J.S. (2018) Targeting early dementia: Using lipid cubic phase nanocarriers to cross the blood-brain barrier. Biomimetics, 3(1), 4; doi: 10.3390/biomimetics3010004 .
vii) D'Arrigo, J.S. (2018) Treating early dementia: Drug targeting and circumventing the blood-brain barrier. Geriatr. Med. Care, 1(2), 1-7; doi: 10.15761/GMC.1000111 .
vi) D'Arrigo, J.S. (2018) Nanotherapy for Alzheimer's disease and vascular dementia: targeting senile endothelium. Adv. Colloid Interface Sci., 251, 44-54. [Chemistry Research Network ( ChemRN ) preprint server, posted 9-22-17, manuscript #3041744; BITSS Preprints server, posted 10-08-17, osf.io/preprints/bitss/9afh2, doi: 10.17605/osf.io/xyaj3, ARK: c7605/osf.io/xyaj3 .]
v) D'Arrigo, J.S. (2017) Alzheimer's disease, brain injury, and C.N.S. nanotherapy in humans: sonoporation augmenting drug targeting. Medical Sciences, 5(4), 29; doi: 10.3390/medsci5040029 (under Neurosciences section; -- invited article in the Special Issue "Advances in the Pathogenesis of Neurodegenerative Diseases"). [ MDPI Preprints server, posted 9-30-17, preprints.org/manuscript/201709.0166/v1; (doi: 10.20944/preprints201709.0166,v1).]
iv) D'Arrigo, J.S. (2015) Nanotherapy for Alzheimer's. Chemical & Engineering News, Vol. 93 (Oct. 19 issue): p. 2
iii) D'Arrigo, J.S. (2012) Stable Nanoemulsions: Self-Assembly in Nature and Nanomedicine (Chinese translation). 468 pp.; Ke'Ai Communications Publishing, Beijing.
ii) D'Arrigo, J.S. (2011) Stable Nanoemulsions: Self-Assembly in Nature and Nanomedicine. 436 pp.; Elsevier, Amsterdam and Oxford.
i) D'Arrigo, J.S. (2010) "Self-Assembling Nanoemulsions" [slide show; -- see below]