151. Sentinel lymph node mapping by a near-infrared fluorescent heptamethine dye
- Author
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Chunmeng Shi, Juan Xiao, Xu Tan, Yongping Su, Chao Zhang, Ying Zhu, Tianmin Cheng, and Shaojun Wang
- Subjects
Indocyanine Green ,Pathology ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Indoles ,Optical Phenomena ,Sentinel lymph node ,Sus scrofa ,Biophysics ,Bioengineering ,Biomaterials ,Mice ,Quantum Dots ,medicine ,Toxicity Tests, Acute ,Animals ,Fluorescent Dyes ,Spectroscopy, Near-Infrared ,Chemistry ,Near-infrared spectroscopy ,Iodides ,Fluorescence ,Sentinel lymph node mapping ,Systemic toxicity ,Lymphatic system ,Mechanics of Materials ,Ceramics and Composites ,Lymph ,Lymph Nodes ,Clearance ,Biomedical engineering - Abstract
We describe a near-infrared fluorescent heptamethine dye (IR-780 iodide) with unique properties for sentinel lymph node (SLN) mapping in both small and large animals. This dye has a significant photobrightening effect in serum and a long retention time in the lymphatic system which allows to acquire much higher signal-to-noise ratios. Injection of only 10 nmol of this dye permits SLNs to be imaged easily in pigs using excitation fluence rates of only 2 μW/cm 2 . In addition, this dye has a unique stability property after formalin fixation in tissues which raises the possibility of developing new and sensitive means of detecting lymph nodes in harvested surgical specimens. This dye can be completely cleared from the circulation in a couple of days and does not cause acute systemic toxicity.
- Published
- 2009