Purpose: Create a Raman spectroscopic database with potential to diagnose cancer and investigate two different diagnostic methodologies. Raman spectroscopy measures the energy of photons scattered inelastically by molecules. These molecular signatures form the basis of identifying complex biomolecules and can be used to differentiate normal from neoplastic tissue.
Methods: 1,352 spectra from 55 specimens were collected from fresh or frozen normal brain, kidney and adrenal gland and their malignancies. Spectra were obtained utilizing a Renishaw Raman microscope (RM1000) at 785 nm excitation wavelength with an exposure time of 10 to 20 s/spectrum over three accumulations. Spectra were preprocessed and discriminant function analysis was used to classify spectra based on pathological gold standard.
Results: The results of leave 25 % out training/testing validation were as follows: 94.3 % accuracy for training and 91.5 % for testing adrenal, 95.1 % accuracy for training and 88.9 % for testing group of brain, and 100 % accuracy for kidney training/testing groups when tissue origin was assumed. A generalized database not assuming tissue origin provided 88 % training and 85.5 % testing accuracy.
Conclusion: A database can be made from Raman spectra to classify and grade normal from cancerous tissue. This database has the potential for real time diagnosis of fresh tissue and can potentially be applied to the operating room in vivo.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s00383-012-3211-6 | DOI Listing |
Angew Chem Int Ed Engl
January 2025
Universidad Complutense de Madrid Facultad de Ciencias Quimicas, Inorganic Chemistry Department, 28034, Madrid, SPAIN.
Achieving high battery performance from low-cost, easily synthesisable electrode materials is crucial for advancing energy storage technologies. Metal organic frameworks (MOFs) combining inexpensive transition metals and organic ligands are promising candidates for high-capacity cathodes. Iron-chloranilate-water frameworks are herein reported to be produced in aqueous media under mild conditions.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFJ Biophotonics
January 2025
Department of Electronic Engineering, Maynooth University, Kildare, Ireland.
Broadband CARS is a coherent Raman scattering technique that provides access to the full biological vibrational spectrum within milliseconds, facilitating the recording of widefield hyperspectral Raman images. In this work, BCARS hyperspectral images of unstained cells from two different cell lines of immune lineage (T cell [Jurkat] and pDCs [CAL-1]) were recorded and analyzed using multivariate statistical algorithms in order to determine the spectral differences between the cells. A classifier was trained which could distinguish the known cells with a 97% out-of-bag accuracy.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFAngew Chem Int Ed Engl
January 2025
JNCASR: Jawaharlal Nehru Centre for Advanced Scientific Research, New Chemistry Unit, Jakkur, Bangalore, INDIA.
BiTe, a member of the (Bi2)m(Bi2Te3)n homologous series, possesses natural van der Waals-like heterostructure with a Bi2 bilayer sandwiched between the two [Te-Bi-Te-Bi-Te] quintuple layers. BiTe exhibits both the quantum states of weak topological and topological crystalline insulators, making it a dual topological insulator and a suitable candidate for spintronics, quantum computing and thermoelectrics. Herein, we demonstrate that the chemical bonding in BiTe is to be metavalent, which plays a significant role in the pressure dependent change in the topology of the electronic structure Fermi surface.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFJ Fluoresc
January 2025
Electrical Engineering, Indian Institute of Technology, Gandhinagar, Gujarat, India.
Graphene quantum dots (GQDs) are highly valued for their chemical stability, tunable size, and biocompatibility. Utilizing green chemistry, a microwave-assisted synthesis method was employed to produce water-soluble GQDs from Mangifera Indica leaf extract. This approach is efficient, cost-effective, and environmentally friendly, offering reduced reaction times, energy consumption, and uniform particle sizes, and has proven advantageous over other methods.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFAngew Chem Int Ed Engl
January 2025
Sun Yat-Sen University, Environmental Science and Engineering, CHINA.
Despite recent substantial advances in water treatment, the ability to selectively degrade trace micropollutants in real waters with complex matrix components remains a grand challenge. Here we report rational crafting of graphene oxide (GO)-wrapped defective TiO2 composite catalysts that creates nanoscopic confinement over the TiO2 surface within GO, thereby enabling the selective degradation of micropollutants through effectively excluding natural organic matter (NOM) and anions from the nanoconfined catalytic sites. In contrast to unconfined counterparts, the nanoconfined composite catalysts retain high degradation efficiency when exposed to various concentrations of NOM and anions, even in real water samples.
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