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Vitalij Novickij

Researcher at Vilnius Gediminas Technical University

Publications -  103
Citations -  1030

Vitalij Novickij is an academic researcher from Vilnius Gediminas Technical University. The author has contributed to research in topics: Electroporation & Chemistry. The author has an hindex of 14, co-authored 76 publications receiving 637 citations.

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High-frequency submicrosecond electroporator

TL;DR: In this article, a novel electroporator which is capable of generating single and bursts of high power (3,kV, 60 A) square wave pulses of variable duration (100 ns to 1 ms) with predefined repetition frequency (1 Hz to 3.5 MHz).
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Selective susceptibility to nanosecond pulsed electric field (nsPEF) across different human cell types

TL;DR: The cytotoxic efficiency showed no apparent correlation with cell or nuclear size, cell morphology, metabolism level, or the extent of membrane disruption by ns PEF, suggesting that manipulation of PEF parameters can, at least for certain cancers, overcome their resistance to nsPEF ablation.
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High frequency electroporation efficiency is under control of membrane capacitive charging and voltage potential relaxation

TL;DR: It was shown that the PRF is an important parameter that could be used for flexible control of electroporation efficiency in the high frequency range and it was determined that a threshold PRF exists when the relaxation of the cell transmembrane potential is longer than the delay between the consequent pulses.
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Excitation and electroporation by MHz bursts of nanosecond stimuli.

TL;DR: This work shows how temporal summation when pulses are compressed into high-rate bursts is a universal and efficient way to lower excitation thresholds and facilitate electroporation.
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Pulsed Electromagnetic Field Assisted in vitro Electroporation: A Pilot Study

TL;DR: Results show increased membrane permeability by PEF when combined with magnetic field pulse, which can explain electroporation at considerably lower electric field strengths induced by PEMF compared to classical Electroporation.