QUANTITATIVE OPTICAL SPECTROSCOPY FOR TISSUE DIAGNOSIS
- 1 October 1996
- journal article
- review article
- Published by Annual Reviews in Annual Review of Physical Chemistry
- Vol. 47 (1) , 555-606
- https://doi.org/10.1146/annurev.physchem.47.1.555
Abstract
▪ Abstract The interaction of light within tissue has been used to recognize disease since the mid-1800s. The recent developments of small light sources, detectors, and fiber optic probes provide opportunities to quantitatively measure these interactions, which yield information for diagnosis at the biochemical, structural, or (patho)physiological level within intact tissues. However, because of the strong scattering properties of tissues, the reemitted optical signal is often influenced by changes in biochemistry (as detected by these spectroscopic approaches) and by physiological and pathophysiological changes in tissue scattering. One challenge of biomedical optics is to uncouple the signals influenced by biochemistry, which themselves provide specificity for identifying diseased states, from those influenced by tissue scattering, which are typically unspecific to a pathology. In this review, we describe optical interactions pursued for biomedical applications (fluorescence, fluorescence lifetime, phosphorescence, and Raman from cells, cultures, and tissues) and then provide a descriptive framework for light interaction based upon tissue absorption and scattering properties. Finally, we review important endogenous and exogenous biological chromophores and describe current work to employ these signals for detection and diagnosis of disease.Keywords
This publication has 230 references indexed in Scilit:
- Mathematical model for time-resolved and frequency-domain fluorescence spectroscopy in biological tissuesApplied Optics, 1994
- Comparison of Fourier transform Raman spectra of mammalian and reptilian skinThe Analyst, 1994
- Detection of squamous cell cancer and pre-cancerous lesions by imaging of tissue autofluorescence in the hamster cheek pouch modelSurgical Oncology, 1992
- Rapid Near-Infrared Raman Spectroscopy of Human Tissue with a Spectrograph and CCD DetectorApplied Spectroscopy, 1992
- Time-gated fluorescence spectroscopy of porphyrin derivatives and aluminium phthalocyanine incorporated in vivo in a murine ascitic tumour modelJournal of Photochemistry and Photobiology B: Biology, 1991
- In situ differentiation between nevi and malignant melanomas by fluorescence measurementsThe Science of Nature, 1991
- Fluorescence tomographical studies on breast tissue with CancerThe Science of Nature, 1990
- Medical Application of Raman SpectroscopyApplied Spectroscopy Reviews, 1988
- Isolation and characterization of a fluorescent material in bovine achilles tendon collagenBiochemical and Biophysical Research Communications, 1977
- Angular Dependence of Scattering from Escherichia coli CellsApplied Optics, 1972