Biosensors (Jan 2022)

Development of Stereo NIR-II Fluorescence Imaging System for 3D Tumor Vasculature in Small Animals

  • Shih-Po Su,
  • Syue-Liang Lin,
  • Yang-Hsiang Chan,
  • Yi-Jang Lee,
  • Yun-Chen Lee,
  • Pin-Xuan Zeng,
  • Yi-Xuan Li,
  • Muh-Hwa Yang,
  • Huihua Kenny Chiang

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/bios12020085
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 12, no. 2
p. 85

Abstract

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Near-infrared-II (NIR-II, 1000–1700 nm) fluorescence imaging boasts high spatial resolution and deep tissue penetration due to low light scattering, reduced photon absorption, and low tissue autofluorescence. NIR-II biological imaging is applied mainly in the noninvasive visualization of blood vessels and tumors in deep tissue. In the study, a stereo NIR-II fluorescence imaging system was developed for acquiring three-dimension (3D) images on tumor vasculature in real-time, on top of the development of fluorescent semiconducting polymer dots (IR-TPE Pdots) with ultra-bright NIR-II fluorescence (1000–1400 nm) and high stability to perform long-term fluorescence imaging. The NIR-II imaging system only consists of one InGaAs camera and a moving stage to simulate left-eye view and right-eye view for the construction of 3D in-depth blood vessel images. The system was validated with blood vessel phantom of tumor-bearing mice and was applied successfully in obtaining 3D blood vessel images with 0.6 mm- and 5 mm-depth resolution and 0.15 mm spatial resolution. The NIR-II stereo vision provides precise 3D information on the tumor microenvironment and blood vessel path.

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