Publication | Closed Access
Ex Vivo Diagnosis of Lung Cancer Using a Raman Miniprobe
94
Citations
31
References
2009
Year
Surface-enhanced Raman ScatteringPathologyLight Scattering SpectroscopySpectrochemical AnalysisLung TissueOncologyCancer DetectionFiber Optic EndoscopeOptical SpectroscopyRadiation OncologyBiophysicsCancer ResearchRadiologyHealth SciencesBiophotonicsEx Vivo DiagnosisLung CancerSpectroscopyBronchial NeoplasmMedicineSpectroscopic Method
Lung cancer is the most common cause of cancer death. The conventional method of confirming the diagnosis is bronchoscopy, inspecting the airways of the patient with a fiber optic endoscope. A number of studies have shown that Raman spectroscopy can diagnose lung cancer in vitro. In this study, Raman spectra were obtained from ex vivo normal and malignant lung tissue using a minifiber optic Raman probe suitable for insertion into the working channel of a bronchoscope. Shifted subtracted Raman spectroscopy was used to reduce the fluorescence from the lung tissue. Using principal component analysis with a leave-one-out analysis, the tissues were classified accurately. This novel technique has the potential to obtain Raman spectra from tumors from patients with lung cancer in vivo.
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