TCRT October 2004No. 5 (p 411-524) October 2004 ISSN 1533-0338
Optical Spectroscopy Near Infrared Spectroscopy and Imaging to Probe Differences in Water Content in Normal and Cancer Human Prostate Tissues (p. 491-498)The content of water in cancerous and normal human prostate in vitro tissues was shown to be different using near infrared (NIR) spectroscopy. The water absorption peaks at 1444 nm and 1944 nm are observed in both types of prostate tissues. The measurements show that less water is contained in cancerous tissues than in normal tissues. The OH stretching vibrational overtone mode at 1444 nm and other water overtone modes provide key spectroscopic fingerprints to detect cancer in prostate tissue. Transmission and backscattered spectral imaging were measured in cancer and normal prostate tissues. The degree of polarization for 700nm, 800nm, 1200nm, and 1450nm is larger for normal than for cancer tissues. The knowledge about water content offers a potential as a diagnostic tool to better determine and image cancer in prostate and in other tissues types such as breast and cervix using the absorption from vibrational overtones of H2O molecules in the NIR.
Key words: Light scattering, Polarization, Prostate cancer detection, Water absorption, Optical imaging, Overtones, Cancer. J. H. Ali, M.S. Institute for Ultrafast Spectroscopy and Lasers and The New York State Center for Advanced Technology for Ultrafast Photonics Materials and Applications Subscription is more cost effective than purchasing PDFs on-the-fly. Click here for details. |
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