| Literature DB >> 31075912 |
Mihai Danciu1, Teodora Alexa-Stratulat2, Cipriana Stefanescu3, Gianina Dodi4, Bogdan Ionel Tamba5, Cosmin Teodor Mihai6, Gabriela Dumitrita Stanciu7, Andrei Luca8, Irene Alexandra Spiridon9, Loredana Beatrice Ungureanu10, Victor Ianole11, Irina Ciortescu12, Catalina Mihai13, Gabriela Stefanescu14, Ioan Chirilă15, Romeo Ciobanu16, Vasile Liviu Drug17.
Abstract
The Terahertz's wavelength is located between the microwave and the infrared region of the electromagnetic spectrum. Because it is non-ionizing and non-invasive, Terahertz (THz)-based detection represents a very attractive tool for repeated assessments, patient monitoring, and follow-up. Cancer acts as the second leading cause of death in many regions, and current predictions estimate a continuous increasing trend. Of all types of tumors, digestive cancers represent an important percentage and their incidence is expected to increase more rapidly than other tumor types due to unhealthy lifestyle habits. Because it can precisely differentiate between different types of molecules, depending on water content, the information obtained through THz-based scanning could have several uses in the management of cancer patients and, more importantly, in the early detection of different solid tumors. The purpose of this manuscript is to offer a comprehensive overview of current data available on THz-based detection for digestive cancers. It summarizes the characteristics of THz waves and their interaction with tissues and subsequently presents available THz-based technologies (THz spectroscopy, THz-tomography, and THZ-endoscope) and their potential for future clinical use. The third part of the review is focused on highlighting current in vitro and in vivo research progress in the field, for identifying specific digestive cancers known as oral, esophageal, gastric, colonic, hepatic, and pancreatic tumors.Entities:
Keywords: cancer diagnosis; digestive cancer; screening; terahertz endoscopy; terahertz spectroscopy; terahertz tomography
Year: 2019 PMID: 31075912 PMCID: PMC6539301 DOI: 10.3390/ma12091519
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Materials (Basel) ISSN: 1996-1944 Impact factor: 3.623
Figure 1The spectrum of electromagnetic waves, characteristics, and medical applications.
Overview of the biomedical applications of THz technology.
| Class | Technique | Detected Compounds | References |
|---|---|---|---|
| Nucleic acids | THz-TDS | DNA, sequences of oligonucleotides, RNA | [ |
| THz photo-mixing | DNA | [ | |
| THz-based metallic mesh | DNA: single-stranded and double-stranded | [ | |
| Time-resolved THz | Hybridized/denaturated DNA films | [ | |
| Amino acids and peptides | THz-TDS and transmittance spectroscopy | 20 naturally occurring lyophilized amino acids, 1-serine and 1-cysteine, L-cysteine and L-histidine, polyglycine and poly-L-alanine, L-glutamic acid, Histidine analogs of oxytocin and vasopressin, Alanine-rich peptides, L-Threonine and glycine | [ |
| Proteins | THz-TDS | Wild-Type and D96N mutant Bacteriorhodopsin, Photoactive protein systems: rhodopsin and bacteriorhodopsin, Hen egg white lysozyme, Immunoglobin (IgG) protein, Protein hydration and protein–ligand binding, Protein–ligand binding among hen egg white lysozyme and triacetylglucosamine | [ |
| Tissues (dermatology) | THz-TDS | Human scleral tissues, Rabbit corneal tissue ex vivo, Skin tissues vs. human basal cell carcinoma, Bone, Brain tissues from Alzheimer disease patients | [ |
| THz empirical mode decomposition | Fresh porcine muscle and skin tissues | [ | |
| THz pulsed imaging | Rat tissues, Basal cell carcinoma and melanoma, Porcine skin burns, Human skin in vivo (stratum corneum thickness and hydration) | [ | |
| Dental health | THz pulse and reflection imaging | Teeth tissues, 32 human permanent teeth surfaces (detection of dental caries ex vivo), Enamel demineralization in vitro. | [ |
| THz-TDS | Enamel-dentine boundary | [ | |
| Pharmaceuticals | THz pulse imaging | Tablet and coating integrity and performance | [ |
| THz Spectroscopy and THz-TDS | Direct measurement of crystallization and molecular mobility of amorphous pharmaceuticals. Pharmaceutical materials and tablets. Aspirin and Aspirin Precursors. Pharmaceutical Polymorphism and Crystallinity. L-, D-, and DL-Tartaric Acid. | [ | |
| Oncology | THz pulse and reflection imaging | Skin cancer: ex vivo and in vivo basal cell carcinoma, nonmelanoma. Breast cancer: in situ non-calcified form, triple negative infiltrating ductal carcinoma, micro-metastatic lymph nodes. Lung neoplasm: squamous cell carcinoma. Uterine cervical neoplasm. | [ |
| A specific discussion on digestive cancers can be found in following sections. | |||
Comparative performance parameters of imaging diagnostic methods.
| Technique | Spatial Resolution, mm | Damage to Healthy Tissue | Limits |
|---|---|---|---|
| Conventional colonoscopy/endoscopy | Lack of spatial resolution [ | Invasive | Operator dependent and can have high false-negative rates |
| X-ray computer tomography | 0.5–2 [ | Minimal radiation exposure | Low sensitivity for digestive cancers and can not be repeated very often- |
| MRI | 0.1–2 (depended on Tesla range) [ | Non-invasive, uses contrast agents | High cost, time consuming investigation |
| OCT | 0.01 [ | Non-invasive | High cost, subjectivity in image interpretation, research use only |
| PET | 0.54–6 (dependent on the isotope) [ | Minimized risk tissue damage due to radiation | High-cost, the lack of anatomic correlation, restricted availability |
| THz technology | 0.1–0.25 [ | Non-invasive and non-ionizing under controlled radiation power density and exposure time | As discussed in a previous section |