Publications by authors named "Heyke Diddens-Tschoeke"

The fluorescent dye indocyanine green (ICG) is clinically approved and has been applied for ophthalmic and intraoperative angiography, measurement of cardiac output and liver function, or as contrast agent in cancer surgery. Though ICG is known for its photochemical effects, it has played a minor role so far in photodynamic therapy or techniques for targeted protein-inactivation. Here, we investigated ICG as an antibody-conjugate for the selective inactivation of the protein Ki-67 in the nucleus of cells.

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Background And Objective: In an attempt to develop a new therapeutic approach for highly localized thermal destruction of tissue targets that lack natural pigmentation, the potential of in-vivo dye-enhanced photothermal therapy (PTT) was investigated. PTT involves the application of an exogenous absorber, which accumulates in metabolically active tissues, followed by non-invasive light irradiation, using appropriate wavelengths, exposure durations, and irradiances. The chromophore used, palladium(II) octabutoxynaphthalocyanine (PdNc(OBu)8 ), strongly absorbs in the near infrared wavelength range which thus permits good penetration depth of the exciting light.

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