Dye-enhanced reflectance and fluorescence confocal microscopy as an optical pathology tool
Article 2006 en
Authors
AY
Anna N. Yaroslavsky
ES
Elena Salomatina
JN
John Novak
Abstract
1 min read
Early detection and precise excision of neoplasms are imperative requirements for successful cancer treatment. In this study we evaluated the use of dye-enhanced confocal microscopy as an optical pathology tool in the <i>ex vivo</i> trial with fresh thick non-melanoma skin cancer excisions and <i>in vivo</i> trial with B16F10 melanoma cancer in mice. For the experiments the tumors were rapidly stained using aqueous solutions of either toluidine blue or methylene blue and imaged using multimodal confocal microscope. Reflectance images were acquired at the wavelengths of 630nm and 650 nm. Fluorescence was excited at 630 nm and 650 nm. Fluorescence emission was registered in the range between 680 nm and 710 nm. The images were compared to the corresponding <i>en face</i> frozen H&E sections. The results of the study indicate confocal images of stained cancerous tissue closely resemble corresponding H&E sections both <i>in vivo</i> and <i>in vitro</i>. This remarkable similarity enables interpretation of confocal images in a manner similar to that of histopathology. The developed technique may provide an efficient real-time optical tool for detecting skin pathology.
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