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Maseo Yafuso

Bio: Maseo Yafuso is an academic researcher. The author has an hindex of 1, co-authored 1 publications receiving 296 citations.

Papers
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Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: An optical fluorescence based intravascular blood gas monitoring system has been developed which is particularly suited for the critical care and surgical settings and which has a sensor probe that can be introduced into the patient via a radial artery catheter.
Abstract: Optical fluorescence has an extensive history of application in the laboratory to the measurement of ionic concentrations and the partial pressures of oxygen and carbon dioxide. The use of optical fluorescence based sensors to fulfill a recognized need for continuous invasive monitoring of arterial blood gases offers a number of inherent advantages. However, the requirements placed upon a blood gas probe and supporting instrumentation appropriate for use in the clinical environment result in significant design challenges in selection of suitable fluorescent dyes, maintenance of mechanical integrity while obtaining required miniaturization of sensors, and in the transmission, acquisition, and processing of low level light signals. An optical fluorescence based intravascular blood gas monitoring system has been developed which is particularly suited for the critical care and surgical settings and which has a sensor probe that can be introduced into the patient via a radial artery catheter. This system has shown an excellent agreement of measured with true values of pH, pCO2, and P02 in both in vitro and animal studies. Linear regression analysis of typical in vitro data, where true levels were established via tonometry and standardization to a high accuracy laboratory pH measuring instrument, shows slope/intercept values very close to 1.0/0.0 and correlation coefficients of greater than 0.99 for all three parameters.

298 citations


Cited by
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Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this article, a new oxygen-sensitive luminescent materials were obtained by physically immobilizing luminescence ruthenium(11) diimine complexes in silicone rubber.
Abstract: New oxygen-sensitive luminescent materials were obtained by physically immobilizing luminescent ruthenium(11) diimine complexes in silicone rubber. The dyes were made silicone-soluble by converting them into the respective ion pairs with organic anions. Acetic acid-releasing one-component RTV silicones were found to provide the best matrix for sensor membranes. The dyed silicone prepolymers were spread onto planar solid supports, cured, and characterized in terms of quenching by oxygen, response time, interferences, storage stability, and photostability. Strong evidence is presented from quenching experiments that the luminescent ion pairs are present in both a monomolecular and an aggregated form, the respective quenching constants being highly different. This results in nonlinear Stern-Volmer graphs. The new oxygen-sensitive materials are considered to present a major improvement over existing sensor materials in terms of response time, luminescence intensity, and long-term stability. They not only may be applied as planar films but also as very thin coatings on various kinds of waveguides. We also describe several novel materials for use as light-tight optical isolations. They are spread onto the oxygen-sensitive films in order to minimize interferences by (a) ambient light and (b) potentially interfering sample properties such as color, turbidity, fluorescence, and varying refractive index.

327 citations

Patent
19 Jul 1989
TL;DR: In this paper, the axial core at one end of an optical fiber segment is disposed in the light path defined by the core at the optical fiber segments to the analyte-permeable matrix, which contains an indicator molecule covalently linked to a polymer.
Abstract: FIBER-OPTIC PHYSIOLOGICAL PROBES Abstract Fiber-optic sensors suitable for monitoring physiological analyte concentration. An analyte-permeable matrix is disposed in the light path definedby the axial core at one end of an optical fiber segment. The matrix contains anindicator molecule covalently linked to a polymer, preferably methyl methacrylate/methacrylamidopropyltrimethylammonium chloride, N-vinyl-pyrrolidone/p-aminostyrene, methyl methacrylate/hydroxymethyl methacrylate, methyl methacrylate/N-vinylpyrrolidone, or methyl methacrylate/acrylic acid. In representative embodiments, the polymer is approximately 94:6 mole/mole percent of either methyl methacrylate/methacrylamidopropyltrimethylammonium chloride or N-vinylpyrrolidone/p-aminostyrene copolymer. Drift-free performance is obtained with such sensors having analyte-permeable matrices of significantly less than about 70 microns in thickness. The indicator molecule may be covalently linked to the polymer through an aminoarylalkylamine, such as 4-(aminophenyl)-ethylamine or 4-(aminophenyl)-propylamine. The indicator molecule may be an absorptive molecule, such as phenol red or carboxynaphthophthalein (hydrogen ion analyte), in which case the indicator molecule may be covalently linked to the polymer through either an azo-amide or an amidyl-amide linkage. The indicator molecule may be a luminescent molecule, such as carboxynaphthofluorescein (hydrogen ion analyte) or an oxygen-quenchableporphyrin derivative. The sensor may have a reflector disposed in the light pathdistal with respect to the optical fiber segment to the analyte-permeable matrix. Suitable reflectors include gold foil or films of titanium dioxide, zinc oxide, or barium sulfate. A pCO2 sensor is configured with a gas-permeable but ion-impermeable membrane encapsulating an analyte-permeable matrix that includes a base having a pKa ranging from about 6.0 to about 7.8. The outer membrane may be a silicone, polycarbonate, or urethane. The base may be an inorganic salt, such as bicarbonate, in which case the analyte-permeable matrix should include an antioxidant. Alternatively, the base may be a polymeric base containing, e.g., 2-vinylpyridine, 4-vinylpyridine, histamine, 1-vinylimidazole, or 4-vinylimadazole. Gas-permeability is afforded to the matrix by a minor component of hydrophilic polymer such as polyethylene glycol. A plurality of thepH, pO2, and PCO2 sensors may be disposed together in substantially coterminal array to make a multi-variable probe, which may also include a thermocouple wire.

292 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: This is the first comprehensive review on methods and materials for use in optical sensing of pH values and on applications of such sensors.
Abstract: This is the first comprehensive review on methods and materials for use in optical sensing of pH values and on applications of such sensors. The Review starts with an introduction that contains subsections on the definition of the pH value, a brief look back on optical methods for sensing of pH, on the effects of ionic strength on pH values and pKa values, on the selectivity, sensitivity, precision, dynamic ranges, and temperature dependence of such sensors. Commonly used optical sensing schemes are covered in a next main chapter, with subsections on methods based on absorptiometry, reflectometry, luminescence, refractive index, surface plasmon resonance, photonic crystals, turbidity, mechanical displacement, interferometry, and solvatochromism. This is followed by sections on absorptiometric and luminescent molecular probes for use pH in sensors. Further large sections cover polymeric hosts and supports, and methods for immobilization of indicator dyes. Further and more specific sections summarize the state of the art in materials with dual functionality (indicator and host), nanomaterials, sensors based on upconversion and 2-photon absorption, multiparameter sensors, imaging, and sensors for extreme pH values. A chapter on the many sensing formats has subsections on planar, fiber optic, evanescent wave, refractive index, surface plasmon resonance and holography based sensor designs, and on distributed sensing. Another section summarizes selected applications in areas, such as medicine, biology, oceanography, bioprocess monitoring, corrosion studies, on the use of pH sensors as transducers in biosensors and chemical sensors, and their integration into flow-injection analyzers, microfluidic devices, and lab-on-a-chip systems. An extra section is devoted to current challenges, with subsections on challenges of general nature and those of specific nature. A concluding section gives an outlook on potential future trends and perspectives.

233 citations

Patent
Thomas P. Maxwell1
26 Jan 1988
TL;DR: In this article, a system consisting of a catheter and a probe is used to detect a parameter of interest in vivo with the help of a sensor network, which includes one or more sensors at its distal end.
Abstract: A parameter of blood is sensed in vivo with a system which includes a catheter and a probe. The catheter has a lumen extending therethrough, a proximal end, a distal end and a distal opening at the distal end. The probe includes one or more sensors at its distal end. A saline solution is introduced into the lumen so that there is an interface adjacent the distal opening of the catheter between the blood and saline solution. The probe is received within the catheter and affixed thereto. The interface is moved back and forth in the lumen to expose the sensors to blood so that they can sense the blood parameters of interest.

221 citations

Patent
02 Jun 1994
TL;DR: A fiber optic sensor suitable for measuring and monitoring fluid parameters, e.g. carbon dioxide and oxygen partial pressure and hydrogen ion concentration ( pH), is described in this paper. But it is not suitable for long term stability.
Abstract: A fiber optic sensor suitable for measuring and monitoring fluid parameters, e.g. blood parameters such as carbon dioxide and oxygen partial pressure and hydrogen ion concentration ( pH ). Analyte sensitive chemistry in such probes includes molecules sensitive to responding to an analyte change in an optically detectable system. Methods of making analyte measuring chemistries including disposing an indicator complex in the path of light and casting over it films of permeable / semi- permeable polymer membranes capable of diffusion of gases and other analytes. A liquid control validation solution ) acts as a simulating standard for blood gas analysis. Liquid calibration solutions which mimic fluids such as blood to validate and test sensors for long term stability.

195 citations