15 research outputs found

    Terahertz pulsed imaging of freshly excised human colonic tissues

    Get PDF
    We present the results from a feasibility study which measures properties in the terahertz frequency range of excised cancerous, dysplastic and healthy colonic tissues from 30 patients. We compare their absorption and refractive index spectra to identify trends which may enable different tissue types to be distinguished. In addition, we present statistical models based on variations between up to 17 parameters calculated from the reflected time and frequency domain signals of all the measured tissues. These models produce a sensitivity of 82% and a specificity of 77% in distinguishing between healthy and all diseased tissues and a sensitivity of 89% and a specificity of 71% in distinguishing between dysplastic and healthy tissues. The contrast between the tissue types was supported by histological staining studies which showed an increased vascularity in regions of increased terahertz absorption

    Automated analysis of multiple sections for the detection of occult cells in lymph nodes

    Full text link
    Purpose: At present, reverse transcription (RT)-PCR against carcino-embryonic antigen mRNA is one of the few research tools for the detection of occult cells in histopathologically assessed negative lymph nodes from patients with colorectal cancer. The aim of this study was to investigate the suitability of supervised low-resolution image analysis of immunohistochemically stained sections as alternative. Experimental Design: Multiple sections (n = 50) of regional lymph nodes from patients with colorectal cancer were immunohistochemically stained and analyzed by applying low-resolution image analysis (flatbed scanning) for semiautomated detection of cytokeratin (CK)-positive stained cells. The sensitivity of this approach was demonstrated for 20 patients with stage II colorectal cancer and compared with RT-PCR regarding the detection of clinically assessed recurrence of disease within 10 years. Results: CK+ cells were detected in all of the patients (n = 6; 100%) with recurrence, compared with five patients (83%) found positive by carcinoembryonic antigen RTPCR. From patients (n = 14) who did not develop a recurrence, eight (57%) had positive lymph nodes. In all patients with recurrence, we visually identified at least one group of CK+ cells (greater than or equal to2 cells). Conclusions: Automated image analysis is a promising tool for the detection of occult cells in histopathologically negative nodes. It is potentially more sensitive but less specific for detecting recurrence of disease than conventional histopathology or RT-PCR and is particularly useful for the evaluation of sentinel nodes. Furthermore, it opens new ways for basic research of occult cells based on molecular profiling after laser-microdissection

    Location and layout planning

    Full text link
    corecore