2005-06-07
Optical biopsy of breast tissue using differential path-length spectroscopy
Publication
Publication
Physics in Medicine and Biology , Volume 50 - Issue 11 p. 2573- 2581
Differential path-length spectroscopy (DPS) was used to determine the local optical properties of breast tissue in vivo. DPS measurements were made on healthy and malignant breast tissue using a fibre-optic needle probe, and were correlated to the histological outcome of core-needle biopsies taken from the same location as the measurements. DPS yields information on the local tissue blood content, the local blood oxygenation, the average micro-vessel diameter, the β-carotene concentration and the scatter slope. Our data show that malignant breast tissue is characterized by a significant decrease in tissue oxygenation and a higher blood content compared to normal breast tissue.
Additional Metadata | |
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doi.org/10.1088/0031-9155/50/11/009, hdl.handle.net/1765/58387 | |
Physics in Medicine and Biology | |
Organisation | Department of Radiation Oncology |
van Veen, R., Amelink, A., Menke-Pluymers, M. B., van der Pol, C., & Sterenborg, D. (2005). Optical biopsy of breast tissue using differential path-length spectroscopy. Physics in Medicine and Biology, 50(11), 2573–2581. doi:10.1088/0031-9155/50/11/009 |