| Literature DB >> 24967840 |
Niels Kröger1, Alexander Egl1, Maria Engel1, Norbert Gretz2, Katharina Haase1, Iris Herpich1, Bettina Kränzlin2, Sabine Neudecker2, Annemarie Pucci1, Arthur Schönhals1, Jochen Vogt1, Wolfgang Petrich1.
Abstract
The spectroscopy of analyte-specific molecular vibrations in tissue thin sections has opened up a path toward histopathology without the need for tissue staining. However, biomedical vibrational imaging has not yet advanced from academic research to routine histopathology due to long acquisition times for the microscopic hyperspectral images and/or cost and availability of the necessary equipment. Here we show that the combination of a fast-tuning quantum cascade laser with a microbolometer array detector allows for a rapid image acquisition and bares the potential for substantial cost reduction. A 3.1 x 2.8 mm2 unstained thin section of mouse jejunum has been imaged in the 9.2 to 9.7 μm wavelength range (spectral resolution ~1 cm(-1)) within 5 min with diffraction limited spatial resolution. The comparison of this hyperspectral imaging approach with standard Fourier transform infrared imaging or mapping of the identical sample shows a reduction in acquisition time per wavenumber interval and image area by more than one or three orders of magnitude, respectively.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2014 PMID: 24967840 DOI: 10.1117/1.JBO.19.11.111607
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Biomed Opt ISSN: 1083-3668 Impact factor: 3.170