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Development of a near-infrared Raman spectroscopy setup compatible with fluorescence-guided surgery

Authors :
Abbasi, Hamed
Lauwerends, Lorraine J.
Bakker Schut, Tom C.
Santos, Inês P.
Caspers, Peter J.
Hardillo, Jose A.U.
Koljenović, Senada
Vahrmeijer, Alexander L.
Baatenburg de Jong, Robert J.
Keereweer, Stijn
Puppels, Gerwin J.
Abbasi, Hamed
Lauwerends, Lorraine J.
Bakker Schut, Tom C.
Santos, Inês P.
Caspers, Peter J.
Hardillo, Jose A.U.
Koljenović, Senada
Vahrmeijer, Alexander L.
Baatenburg de Jong, Robert J.
Keereweer, Stijn
Puppels, Gerwin J.
Source :
Abbasi , H , Lauwerends , L J , Bakker Schut , T C , Santos , I P , Caspers , P J , Hardillo , J A U , Koljenović , S , Vahrmeijer , A L , Baatenburg de Jong , R J , Keereweer , S & Puppels , G J 2023 , ' Development of a near-infrared Raman spectroscopy setup compatible with fluorescence-guided surgery ' , Analyst , vol. 148 , no. 12 , pp. 2676-2682 .
Publication Year :
2023

Abstract

Near-infrared (NIR) fluorescence imaging using exogenous fluorescent agents provides whole-field images in real-time to assist the surgeon in the excision of a tumor. Although the method has high sensitivity, the specificity can sometimes be lower than expected. Raman spectroscopy can detect tumors with high specificity. Therefore, a combination of both techniques can be advantageous. A complication that must be addressed is that the NIR spectral region is favored by both techniques for (in vivo) tissue analysis. When fluorescence and Raman emissions spectrally overlap, it becomes challenging or impossible to detect the Raman signal. In this paper, by avoiding this overlap, we describe a Raman spectroscopy setup capable of recording high-quality Raman spectra from tissue containing NIR exogenous fluorescent agents. We identify an optimal wavelength interval (900-915 nm) for Raman excitation, which avoids both excitation of fluorescent dyes and Raman signal self-absorption by the tissue. In this way, Raman spectroscopy can be combined with the currently most-used NIR fluorescent dyes. This combined novel setup could pave the way for clinical trials benefiting from both fluorescence imaging and Raman spectroscopy to avoid positive margins in cancer surgery.

Details

Database :
OAIster
Journal :
Abbasi , H , Lauwerends , L J , Bakker Schut , T C , Santos , I P , Caspers , P J , Hardillo , J A U , Koljenović , S , Vahrmeijer , A L , Baatenburg de Jong , R J , Keereweer , S & Puppels , G J 2023 , ' Development of a near-infrared Raman spectroscopy setup compatible with fluorescence-guided surgery ' , Analyst , vol. 148 , no. 12 , pp. 2676-2682 .
Notes :
application/pdf, English
Publication Type :
Electronic Resource
Accession number :
edsoai.on1417971475
Document Type :
Electronic Resource