| Literature DB >> 30851014 |
Brook K Byrd1, Margaret R Folaron1, Joseph P Leonor1, Rendall R Strawbridge1, Xu Cao1,2, Petr Bruza1, Scott C Davis1,3.
Abstract
The observed behavior of short-wave infrared (SWIR) light in tissue, characterized by relatively low scatter and subdiffuse photon transport, has generated considerable interest for the potential of SWIR imaging to produce high-resolution, subsurface images of fluorescence activity in vivo. These properties have important implications for fluorescence-guided surgery and preclinical biomedical research. Until recently, translational efforts have been impeded by the conventional understanding that fluorescence molecular imaging in the SWIR regime requires custom molecular probes that do not yet have proven safety profiles in humans. However, recent studies have shown that two readily available near-infrared (NIR-I) fluorophores produce measurable SWIR fluorescence, implying that other conventional fluorophores produce detectable fluorescence in the SWIR window. Using SWIR spectroscopy and wide-field SWIR imaging with tissue-simulating phantoms, we characterize and compare the SWIR emission properties of eight commercially available red/NIR-I fluorophores commonly used in preclinical and clinical research, in addition to a SWIR-specific fluorophore. All fluorophores produce measurable fluorescence emission in the SWIR, including shorter wavelength dyes such as Alexa Fluor 633 and methylene blue. This study is the first to report SWIR fluorescence from six of the eight conventional fluorophores and establishes an important comparative reference for developing and evaluating SWIR imaging strategies for biomedical applications.Entities:
Keywords: cancer imaging; fluorescence spectroscopy; fluorescence-guided surgery; medical imaging; near-infrared II window; short-wave infrared
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2019 PMID: 30851014 PMCID: PMC6408334 DOI: 10.1117/1.JBO.24.3.035004
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Biomed Opt ISSN: 1083-3668 Impact factor: 3.170
Fig. 1Experimental configuration for (a) SWIR fluorescence spectroscopy and (b) SWIR phantom imaging. (c) Normalized absorbance spectra of each fluorophore with overlays indicating excitation laser wavelengths used to measure SWIR fluorescence.
Fig. 2(a)–(c) Normalized fluorescence emission spectra and (d)–(f) corresponding integrated fluorescence signals for three excitation sources. (g) Normalized integrated SWIR fluorescence for each fluorophore/excitation source investigated.
Fig. 3(a) Representative images of SWIR fluorescence in tissue-simulating phantoms containing AF 633, IRDye 680RD, and AF 750. Each image is the median of five acquisitions. (b)–(d) Fluorescence intensities of phantom images as a function of fluorophore concentration (error bars are standard deviation) with linear fits and Pearson’s coefficients.