Sarah Gundy et al 2004 Phys. Med. Biol. 49 359 doi:10.1088/0031-9155/49/3/001
Sarah Gundy1,4, Wil Van der Putten2, Andy Shearer1, Daniel Buckton3,5, Alan G Ryder3,4 and Michael Ball3,4
Show affiliationsPhthalocyanine derivatives are currently under investigation for use in photodynamic therapy, which is a promising cancer treatment. These materials, which display preferential uptake in cancerous cells, also exhibit high fluorescence yields and can be used for tumour detection. Problems with steady-state fluorescence techniques such as excitation scatter and background autofluorescence can be eliminated by using time-resolved imaging techniques without the need for filters. A tissue phantom was assembled to test a constructed time-gated imaging system by drilling 36 wells of varying diameter and depth (10 mm to 1 mm) into a block of polymethyl methacrylate (PMMA). The system was used to record images of chloroaluminium phthalocyanine tetrasulfonate (AlPcTS) at differing concentrations in neat aqueous solvent and cell suspensions within the wells. A mixture of Intralipid (to mimic tissue scatter) and Evan's blue (to mimic tissue absorption) of depths ranging from 1 mm to 10 mm was placed on top of the PMMA block. The ensuing images were analysed using signal-to-noise ratios and contrast–detail curves. The results indicate that the time-gated imaging system can prevent background excitation scatter from distorting the fluorescence signal from a longer-lived photosensitizer without the need for filters.
87.50.wp Therapeutic applications
Issue 3 (7 February 2004)
Received 27 August 2003
Published 16 January 2004
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