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Total 23 records

    Transplantation of autologous epidermal melanocyte–keratinocyte cells suspension for cell therapy of vitiligo: A clinical evaluation and biometric assessment

    , Article Journal of Cosmetic Dermatology ; Volume 21, Issue 12 , 2022 , Pages 7147-7152 ; 14732130 (ISSN) Nilforoushzadeh, M. A ; Farshi, S ; Nouri, M ; Alavi, S ; Bayat Tork, B ; Jaffary, F ; Zare, S ; Sharif University of Technology
    John Wiley and Sons Inc  2022
    Abstract
    Introduction: Among several surgical treatments, the use of transplantation of epidermal cultured melanocytes or melanocytes–keratinocytes cell suspension has gained many researchers and dermatologists' attention as a new technique for the treatment of vitiligo. The present study aimed to transplant autologous epidermal melanocytes–keratinocytes cell suspension for the treatment of vitiligo. Methods: In this study, 15 volunteer patients aged between 18 and 45 years old were studied. The autologous melanocytes–keratinocytes cell suspension was then transplanted to the region after dermabrasion. The included patients were evaluated by VisioFace, MPA9, and Skin Scanner-DUB once before and 1, 2,... 

    The regulated market for kidneys in Iran

    , Article Lecture Notes of the Institute for Computer Sciences, Social-Informatics and Telecommunications Engineering, 22 August 2011 through 23 August 2011 ; Volume 80 LNICST , August , 2012 , Pages 62-75 ; 18678211 (ISSN) ; 9783642309120 (ISBN) Fatemi, F ; Sharif University of Technology
    2012
    Abstract
    We study the kidney market in Iran. The most effective treatment for end-stage renal disease is a kidney transplant. While the supply of cadaveric kidneys is limited, the debate has been focused on the effects of the existence of a free market for human organs. Economists as well as medical and legal researchers are divided over the issue. Iran has a unique kidney market which has been in place for over 20 years, frequently reporting surprising success in reducing the waiting list for kidneys. This paper demonstrates how the Iranian system works  

    Designing a Mathematical Model for Optimizing Organ Transplant Network

    , M.Sc. Thesis Sharif University of Technology Poursaeed, Alireza (Author) ; Najafi, Mehdi (Supervisor)
    Abstract
    Presently, numerous patients die each day while they are awaiting life-saving organ transplant. Despite advances in medicine and technology, and increased awareness of organ donation and transplantation, the gap between supply and demand continues to widen. Therefore, appropriate utilization of donated organs under organ allocation process is vital, and can save several patients’ life. Due to this cause, this study presents a mixed integer multi-period mathematical model to optimize allocation system in an organ transplantation network. The considered network includes donors, hospitals, procurement centers, transplant centers, and patients. The proposed model strives to minimize the overall... 

    A Mathematical Model to Organize Transplants in a Kidney Exchange Program with Uncertain Failures

    , M.Sc. Thesis Sharif University of Technology Porbar, Gohar (Author) ; Najafi, Mehdi (Supervisor) ; Shadrokh, Shahram (Supervisor)
    Abstract
    Kidney transplants are vital for patients with end-stage kidney disease. Therefore, it is essential to allocate kidneys to patients efficiently. Kidney Exchange Programs allow patients with incompatible donors to exchange donors and receive a suitable kidney. In practice, these exchanges occur within cyclic or chain-like structures. Planned transplants may be canceled before the transplant takes place, for a variety of reasons. Failure of one transplant in a cycle or chain can result in the failure of all transplants in that cycle or chain, which can lead to drastic inefficiency in the exchange program.In this thesis, we study kidney exchange programs under uncertainty. We consider... 

    Equity or equality? Which approach brings more satisfaction in a kidney-exchange chain?

    , Article Journal of Personalized Medicine ; Volume 11, Issue 12 , 2021 ; 20754426 (ISSN) Hosseinzadeh, A ; Najafi, M ; Cheungpasitporn, W ; Thongprayoon, C ; Fathi, M ; Sharif University of Technology
    MDPI  2021
    Abstract
    In United States (U.S.), government-funded organizations, such as NLDAC, reimburse travel and subsistence expenses incurred during living-organ donation process. However, in Iran, there is a non-governmental organization called Iranian Kidney Foundation (IKF) that funds the direct and indirect costs of donors through charitable donations and contributions from participants in the exchange program. In this article, for countries outside the U.S. that currently use an equality approach, we propose a potential new compensation-apportionment approach (equitable approach) for kidney-exchange chains and compare it with the currently available system (equality approach) in terms of the... 

    Comparison of transplantation of bone marrow stromal cells (BMSC) and stem cell mobilization by granulocyte colony stimulating factor after traumatic brain injury in rat

    , Article Iranian Biomedical Journal ; Volume 14, Issue 4 , Oct , 2010 , Pages 142-149 ; 1028852X (ISSN) Bakhtiary, M ; Marzban, M ; Mehdizadeh, M ; Joghataei, M. T ; Khoei, S ; Pirhajati Mahabadi, V ; Laribi, B ; Tondar, M ; Moshkforoush, A ; Sharif University of Technology
    2010
    Abstract
    Background: Recent clinical studies of treating traumatic brain injury (TBI) with autologous adult stem cells led us to compare effect of intravenous injection of bone marrow mesenchymal stem cells (BMSC) and bone marrow hematopoietic stem cell mobilization, induced by granulocyte colony stimulating factor (G-CSF), in rats with a cortical compact device. Methods: Forty adult male Wistar rats were injured with controlled cortical impact device and divided randomly into four groups. The treatment groups were injected with 2 × 106 intravenous bone marrow stromal stem cell (n = 10) and also with subcutaneous G-CSF (n = 10) and sham-operation group (n = 10) received PBS and "bromodeoxyuridine... 

    A noninvasive urine metabolome panel as potential biomarkers for diagnosis of t cell-mediated renal transplant rejection

    , Article OMICS A Journal of Integrative Biology ; Volume 24, Issue 3 , March , 2020 , Pages 140-147 Kalantari, S ; Chashmniam, S ; Nafar, M ; Samavat, S ; Rezaie, D ; Dalili, N ; Sharif University of Technology
    Mary Ann Liebert Inc  2020
    Abstract
    Acute T cell-mediated rejection (TCMR)is a major complication after renal transplantation. TCMR diagnosis is very challenging and currently depends on invasive renal biopsy and nonspecific markers such as serum creatinine. A noninvasive metabolomics panel could allow early diagnosis and improved accuracy and specificity. We report, in this study, on urine metabolome changes in renal transplant recipients diagnosed with TCMR, with a view to future metabolomics-based diagnostics in transplant medicine. We performed urine metabolomic analyses in three study groups: (1) 7 kidney transplant recipients with acute TCMR, (2) 15 kidney transplant recipients without rejection but with impaired kidney... 

    Queue Modeling of Patients in Waiting list of Kidney Transplantation

    , M.Sc. Thesis Sharif University of Technology Amini, Fatemeh (Author) ; Modarres Yazdi, Mohammad (Supervisor)
    Abstract
    As the number of patients waiting for receiving kidney transplantation increases all over the world, the average waiting time for a patient in queue rises too, and consequently, the rate of death goes beyond the accepted level. Also, unbalanced numbers of donors and patients with same blood type make the problem bolder. The aim of this research is to design a queuing model in which kidney could be transplanted from deceased donors to patients with different but compatible blood type (Cross-Transplantation) in order to make the average waiting time for patients with different blood type closer to each other. In other words, the transplant system is supposed to make a decision whether to... 

    Transplant Process Optimization in Kidney Donation Problem

    , M.Sc. Thesis Sharif University of Technology Zaheri, Amin (Author) ; Rafiee, Majid (Supervisor)
    Abstract
    At the present, End-stage renal disease(ESRD) is the ninth-leading cause of death in the USA.according methods of medical treatment for End-stage renal disease (ESRD), transplantation is the most viable renal replacement therapy for ESRD patients, there is a disparity between the demand for kidneys for transplantion and the supply. Incompatible inblood-type and antigen matching between patient-donor pairs is cause of shortage in disparity between the demand and the supply.paired kidney exchange of kidney among incompatible patient-donor pairs.PKE can be solve many difficulties in matching patient with incompatible donors. Kidney transplant surgeries in PKE must take place simultaneously... 

    Monitoring patient survival times in surgical systems using a risk-adjusted AFT regression chart

    , Article Quality Technology and Quantitative Management ; Volume 14, Issue 2 , 2017 , Pages 237-248 ; 16843703 (ISSN) Asadayyoobi, N ; Akhavan Niaki, S. T ; Sharif University of Technology
    Abstract
    Monitoring surgical processes has gained prominence by accounting for patients’ health condition prior to surgery in recent years. However, most of previous researchers have focused on Phase-II monitoring based on binary outcomes, while very little attention has been paid to Phase-I monitoring procedures, especially when the outcomes are continuous. In this paper, a general Phase-I accelerated failure time-based risk-adjusted control chart is proposed to monitor continuous surgical outcomes based on a likelihood-ratio test derived from a change-point model. Different from the existing models, this paper shows that continuous outcomes depend not only on the patient conditions described by the... 

    Antioxidant nanomaterials in advanced diagnoses and treatments of ischemia reperfusion injuries

    , Article Journal of Materials Chemistry B ; Volume 5, Issue 48 , 2017 , Pages 9452-9476 ; 20507518 (ISSN) Amani, H ; Habibey, R ; Hajmiresmail, S. J ; Latifi, S ; Pazoki Toroudi, H ; Akhavan, O ; Sharif University of Technology
    Royal Society of Chemistry  2017
    Abstract
    Organ ischemia with inadequate oxygen supply followed by reperfusion (which initiates a complex of inflammatory responses and oxidative stress) occurs in different clinical conditions and surgical procedures including stroke, myocardial infarction, limb ischemia, renal failure, organ transplantation, free-tissue-transfer, cardiopulmonary bypass, and vascular surgery. Even though pharmacological treatments protect against experimental ischemia reperfusion (I/R) injury, there has not been enough success in their application for patient benefits. The main hurdles in the treatment of I/R injury are the lack of diagnosis tools for understanding the complicated chains of I/R-induced signaling... 

    Human olfactory mucosa stem cells delivery using a collagen hydrogel: As a potential candidate for bone tissue engineering

    , Article Materials ; Volume 14, Issue 14 , 2021 ; 19961944 (ISSN) Simorgh, S ; Milan, P. B ; Saadatmand, M ; Bagher, Z ; Gholipourmalekabadi, M ; Alizadeh, R ; Hivechi, A ; Arabpour, Z ; Hamidi, M ; Delattre, C ; Sharif University of Technology
    MDPI AG  2021
    Abstract
    For bone tissue engineering, stem cell‐based therapy has become a promising option. Re-cently, cell transplantation supported by polymeric carriers has been increasingly evaluated. Herein, we encapsulated human olfactory ectomesenchymal stem cells (OE‐MSC) in the collagen hydrogel system, and their osteogenic potential was assessed in vitro and in vivo conditions. Col-lagen type I was composed of four different concentrations of (4 mg/mL, 5 mg/mL, 6 mg/mL, 7 mg/mL). SDS‐Page, FTIR, rheologic test, resazurin assay, live/dead assay, and SEM were used to characterize collagen hydrogels. OE‐MSCs encapsulated in the optimum concentration of collagen hydrogel and transplanted in rat calvarial... 

    Design and development of an effective low-cost robotic cameraman for laparoscopic surgery: RoboLens

    , Article Scientia Iranica ; Volume 18, Issue 1 B , 2011 , Pages 59-71 ; 10263098 (ISSN) Mirbagheri, A ; Farahmand, F ; Meghdari, A ; Karimian, F ; Sharif University of Technology
    2011
    Abstract
    A robotic system was designed and developed to perform the camera handling task during laparoscopic surgery. The system employs an effective low cost mechanism, with a minimum number of actuated DOFs, enabling spherical movement around a remote centre of motion positioned at the the insertion point of the laparoscopic stem. Kinematic analysis showed a high manipulability measure for the system, with the left/right movements directly governed by rotation of the first rotary actuator, and zoom and up/down movements by the simultaneous motions of the linear and second rotary actuators. A prototype of the robot was developed for practical use in an operating room environment. Hands-free operator... 

    Combinational therapy of lithium and human neural stem cells in rat spinal cord contusion model

    , Article Journal of Cellular Physiology ; Volume 234, Issue 11 , 2019 , Pages 20742-20754 ; 00219541 (ISSN) Mohammadshirazi, A ; Sadrosadat, H ; Jaberi, R ; Zareikheirabadi, M ; Mirsadeghi, S ; Naghdabadi, Z ; Ghaneezabadi, M ; Fardmanesh, M ; Baharvand, H ; Kiani, S ; Sharif University of Technology
    Wiley-Liss Inc  2019
    Abstract
    A large number of treatment approaches have been used for spinal cord injury improvement, a medically incurable disorder, and subsequently stem cell transplantation appears to be a promising strategy. The main objective of this study is to ascertain whether combinational therapy of human neural stem cells (hNSCs) together with lithium chloride improves cell survival, proliferation, and differentiation in a rat spinal contusion model, or not. Contusive spinal cord injury was implemented on Wistar male rats. Experimental groups comprised of: control, hNSCs transplanted, lithium chloride (Li), and hNSCs and lithium chloride (hNSCs + Li). In every experimental group, locomotor activity score and... 

    Microfluidic-based droplets for advanced regenerative medicine: current challenges and future trends

    , Article Biosensors ; Volume 12, Issue 1 , 2022 ; 20796374 (ISSN) Nazari, H ; Heirani Tabasi, A ; Ghorbani, S ; Eyni, H ; Razavi Bazaz, S ; Khayati, M ; Gheidari, F ; Moradpour, K ; Kehtari, M ; Ahmadi Tafti, S.M ; Ahmadi Tafti, S. H ; Warkiani, M. E ; Sharif University of Technology
    MDPI  2022
    Abstract
    Microfluidics is a promising approach for the facile and large-scale fabrication of monodispersed droplets for various applications in biomedicine. This technology has demonstrated great potential to address the limitations of regenerative medicine. Microfluidics provides safe, accurate, reliable, and cost-effective methods for encapsulating different stem cells, gametes, biomaterials, biomolecules, reagents, genes, and nanoparticles inside picoliter-sized droplets or droplet-derived microgels for different applications. Moreover, microenvironments made using such droplets can mimic niches of stem cells for cell therapy purposes, simulate native extracellular matrix (ECM) for tissue... 

    Temporary skin grafts based on hybrid graphene oxide-natural biopolymer nanofibers as effective wound healing substitutes: pre-clinical and pathological studies in animal models

    , Article Journal of Materials Science: Materials in Medicine ; Volume 28, Issue 5 , 2017 , 73 ; 09574530 (ISSN) Mahmoudi, N ; Eslahi, N ; Mehdipour, A ; Mohammadi, M ; Akbari, M ; Samadikuchaksaraei, A ; Simchi, A ; Sharif University of Technology
    Springer New York LLC  2017
    Abstract
    Abstract: In recent years, temporary skin grafts (TSG) based on natural biopolymers modified with carbon nanostructures have received considerable attention for wound healing. Developments are required to improve physico-mechanical properties of these materials to match to natural skins. Additionally, in-deep pre-clinical examinations are necessary to ensure biological performance and toxicity effect in vivo. In the present work, we show superior acute-wound healing effect of graphene oxide nanosheets embedded in ultrafine biopolymer fibers (60 nm) on adult male rats. Nano-fibrous chitosan-based skin grafts crosslinked by Genepin with physico-mechanical properties close to natural skins were... 

    In vitro co-culture of human skin keratinocytes and fibroblasts on a biocompatible and biodegradable scaffold

    , Article Iranian Biomedical Journal ; Volume 13, Issue 3 , 2009 , Pages 169-177 ; 1028852X (ISSN) Shariati, S. R. P ; Shokrgozar, M. A ; Vossoughi, M ; Eslamifar, A ; Sharif University of Technology
    2009
    Abstract
    Background: Extensive full-thickness burns require replacement of both epidermis and dermis. In designing skin replacements, the goal has been to re-create this model and make a product which has both essential components. Methods: In the present study, we developed procedures for establishing confluent, stratified layers of cultured human keratinocytes on the surface of modified collagen-chitosan scaffold that contains fibroblasts. The culture methods for propagation of keratinocytes and fibroblasts isolated from human neonatal foreskin were developed. The growth and proliferation of normal human keratinocytes were evaluated in serum-free (keratinocyte growth medium) and our modified... 

    Fabrication and characterization of scaffolds containing different amounts of allantoin for skin tissue engineering

    , Article Scientific Reports ; Volume 11, Issue 1 , 2021 ; 20452322 (ISSN) Dorri Nokoorani, Y ; Shamloo, A ; Bahadoran, M ; Moravvej, H ; Sharif University of Technology
    Nature Research  2021
    Abstract
    Using the skin tissue engineering approach is a way to help the body to recover its lost skin in cases that the spontaneous healing process is either impossible or inadequate, such as severe wounds or burns. In the present study, chitosan/gelatin-based scaffolds containing 0.25, 0.5, 0.75, and 1% allantoin were created to improve the wounds’ healing process. EDC and NHS were used to cross-link the samples, which were further freeze-dried. Different in-vitro methods were utilized to characterize the specimens, including SEM imaging, PBS absorption and degradation tests, mechanical experiments, allantoin release profile assessment, antibacterial assay, and cell viability and adhesion tests.... 

    Polymer/metal composite 3D porous bone tissue engineering scaffolds fabricated by additive manufacturing techniques: A review

    , Article Bioprinting ; Volume 25 , 2022 ; 24058866 (ISSN) Mohammadi Zerankeshi, M ; Bakhshi, R ; Alizadeh, R ; Sharif University of Technology
    Elsevier B.V  2022
    Abstract
    The employment of tissue engineering scaffolds in the reconstruction of the damaged bone tissues has shown remarkable promise since they significantly facilitate the healing process. Fabrication of highly porous biocompatible scaffolds with sufficient mechanical strength is still challenging. In this regard, polymers have been widely utilized to construct three-dimensional (3D) porous scaffolds due to their excellent processability and biocompatibility. However, insufficient mechanical strength and inappropriate degradation rate of the monophasic polymer scaffolds in the bone regeneration process, as the main challenges, limit their extensive clinical application. The incorporation of... 

    HLA alleles and haplotype frequencies in Iranian population

    , Article Human Antibodies ; Volume 30, Issue 2 , 2022 , Pages 79-96 ; 10932607 (ISSN) Ghafouri-Fard, S ; Hussen, B. M ; Pashmforoush, S ; Akbari, M. T ; Arsang-Jang, S ; Nazer, N ; Hamidieh, A. A ; Hajifathali, A ; Dinger, M. E ; Sayad, A ; Dehaghi, M. O ; Sharif University of Technology
    IOS Press BV  2022
    Abstract
    BACKGROUND: HLA genotyping is a prerequisite for selection of suitable donors in the process of bone marrow transplantation. METHODS: In the current study, the frequencies of HLA-A, -B, -C and -DRB1 alleles and A-B-C-DRB1 haplotypes were assessed in 855 healthy Iranian persons using a low-resolution sequence specific primer (SSP) kit. RESULTS: Frequencies were compared between 11 subpopulations including Armani, Balouch, Bandari, Turk, Turkaman, Arab, Fars, Kurd, Gilaki, Lor and Mazani. In total, 17 HLA-A alleles were detected, one of which (HLA-A*74) was present only among Lors. HLA-A*23 and -A*26 were the most frequent HLA-A alleles among Armanis. HLA-A*23 was also common among Turkamans....