• DocumentCode
    896282
  • Title

    Confocal microscopy [detecting and diagnosing cancers]

  • Author

    Luck, Brette ; Carlson, Kristen ; Collier, Tom ; Sung, Kung-Bin

  • Volume
    23
  • Issue
    1
  • fYear
    2004
  • Firstpage
    14
  • Lastpage
    17
  • Abstract
    Optical technologies, such as reflectance and fluorescence microscopy, may help detect and diagnose cancers that originate in the epithelium. The epithelium is the layer of tissue that is exposed to the environment and lines the body´s cavities. Cancers that originate in the epithelium include cervical, oral, colon, lung, stomach, bladder and skin cancers. The curable precursors to cervical cancer are cervical epithelial lesions that have larger and more densely spaced nuclei. A fiber-optic confocal microscope (FOCM) has been developed at the Optical Spectroscopy Lab, University of Texas at Austin, to help detect and diagnose these lesions in vivo. With the aid of acetic acid as a contrast agent, the FOCM shows nuclear size and density information throughout the epithelium, presenting the same information as histology but without removing, staining and slicing cervical epithelial tissue. (There are also spatial resolution requirements for showing cell nuclei.) The Optical Spectroscopy Lab continues to develop confocal microscopic instrumentation, new contrast agents, and image processing techniques to improve early detection of precancerous cervical lesions.
  • Keywords
    biomedical optical imaging; cancer; optical microscopy; acetic acid; cell nucleus density; cell nucleus size; cervical cancer; cervical epithelial lesions; confocal microscopy; contrast agent; epithelium; fiber-optic confocal microscope; fluorescence microscopy; histology; reflectance microscopy; Cancer detection; Cervical cancer; Colon; Fluorescence; Lesions; Lungs; Optical microscopy; Reflectivity; Spectroscopy; Stomach;
  • fLanguage
    English
  • Journal_Title
    Potentials, IEEE
  • Publisher
    ieee
  • ISSN
    0278-6648
  • Type

    jour

  • DOI
    10.1109/MP.2004.1266933
  • Filename
    1266933