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Rigoberto Vazquez Jr.

Member of The Honor Society of Phi Kappa Phi
From Newman, California
Biomedical, Mechanical, Nuclear & Radiological Science Engineer.
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Rigoberto Vazquez Jr Inducted into The Honor Society of Phi Kappa Phi

Rigoberto Vazquez Jr of Ann Arbor, Michigan, was recently initiated into The Honor Society of Phi Kappa Phi, the nation's oldest and most selective all-discipline collegiate honor society. Vazquez...

May, 05 2021 - Verified by The Honor Society of Phi Kappa Phi
Graduate Research Assistant at University of Michigan
October 2019 - August 2020
Project Manager at SLAC National Accelerator Laboratory

SLAC Sponsored CSU Chico Senior Project

August 2018 - May 2019
Research Assistant at University of California, Berkeley
June 2018 - June 2018
Research Assistant at California State University Chico
June 2017 - August 2017
Research Assistant at New York University
June 2016 - August 2016
Swellable catheters based on a dynamic expanding inner diameter
Intravenous (IV) fluid administration is critical for all patients undergoing care in a hospital setting. In-patient hospital practice, surgeries, and emergency care require functional IVs for fluid replacement and medication administration. Proper placement of IVs is vital to providing medical services. The ease of placement of an IV catheter, however, depends not only on the size of the catheter but also on provider experience and patient demographics such as age, body mass index, hydration status, and medical comorbidities present challenges to successful IV placement. Smaller diameter IV placement can improve success and there are instances where multiple small diameter catheters are placed for patient care when larger bore access is unattainable. Smaller inner-diameter catheters for anesthesia have functional constraints. Ideally, there would be a smaller catheter for placement that could function as a larger catheter for patient care. One solution is the idea of functionally responsive catheters. Here, we evaluated tubular-shaped hydrogels as potential functional catheters that can increase in inner diameter through fluid swelling using cross-linked homopolymers of polyacrylamide, PAM (10–40% w/w), and their copolymers with 0–8% w/w Poly-(Ethylene Glycol)-Diacrylate, PEGDA. For the PAM gels, the water transport mechanism was shown to be concentration-dependent Fickian diffusion, with the less concentrated gels exhibiting increasingly anomalous modes. Increasing the PEGDA content in the network yielded an initial high rate of water uptake, characterized by Case II transport. The swelling kinetics depended strongly on the sample geometry and boundary conditions. Initially, in a submerged swelling, the annulus expands symmetrically in both outward and inward directions (it thickens), reducing the internal diameter by up to 70%. After 1 h, however, the inner diameter increases steadily so that at equilibrium, there is a net (>100%) increase in all the dimensions of the tube. The amount of linear swelling at equilibrium depended only on the polymer volume fraction as made, while the rate of inner diameter expansion depended on the hydrophilicity of the matrix and the kinetics of sorption. This study serves as proof of concept to identify key parameters for the successful design of hydrogel-based catheter devices with expanding inner-diameters for applications in medical care.
April 2021 - Publications

Initiation

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