Wednesday, 18 September 2013
On 13:57 by Asveth Sreiram No comments
Tissue-conserving cancer surgery is a highly skilled procedure which involves time-consuming tissue preparation to detect the margins of cancerous tissue. The goal is to remove as much of the tumour as possible while sparing healthy tissue.
With funding from the National Institute for Health Research (NIHR), experts at The University of Nottingham have developed a highly accurate prototype technique which can produce a detailed 'spectroscopic fingerprint' of each tissue layer removed during surgery. This technique -- which can produce detailed maps of the tissue rich in information at the molecular level -- has the potential to speed up and improve the diagnosis of cancer tissue during the operation as well as reduce unnecessary surgery.
The research has been published in the journal Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences and the team, led by Dr Ioan Notingher in the School of Physics and Astronomy, are now looking to build an optimised instrument that can be tested in the clinic. Dr Notingher said: "By refining our prototype instrument to make it more user-friendly and even faster to use. Diagnosis of each tissue layer could be obtained in just a few minutes -- rather than hours. Such developments have the potential to revolutionise the surgical treatment of cancers. This technology will provide a fast and objective way for surgeons to make sure that all the cancer cells have been removed whilst at the same time preserving as much healthy tissue as possible."
The challenges of tissue-conserving surgery
Typically, skin conserving surgery involves cutting away one thin layer of tissue after another and each layer after another is carefully examined to make sure that all the cancer has been removed. This lengthy process is stopped when only health tissue is left. Successful removal of all cancer cells is the key to achieving lower rates of the cancer returning but there is always a balance to be struck between making sure all the cancer is removed and preserving as much healthy tissue as possible in order to reduce scarring and disfigurement.
Dr Notingher said: "The real challenge is to know where the cancer starts and ends when looking at it during an operation so that the surgeon knows when to stop cutting. Our technique can also diagnose the presence or absence of skin cancer in thick chunks of skin tissue, making it unnecessary to cut the tissue up further into thin slices."
Scientific research in this field started around two decades ago and only now are scientists starting to publish the results of their work. The use of lasers and high-sensitivity light detection technologies allows faster and more sensitive imaging of tissues and discrimination of tumours.
A huge step forward for the patient
One particular technique, known as Mohs surgery -- microscopically controlled surgery -- is used for the treatment of difficult cases of a type of skin cancer called basal cell carcinoma (BCC). BCC is the commonest cancer in humans with more than 60,000 new patients diagnosed each year in the UK. The incidence of BCC continues to increase each year because we have an aging population who have had a lot of sun exposure in the past. Mohs surgery provides the highest cure rates for BCC, but the procedure takes a lot of time because each new tissue layer has to be frozen and examined during the operation. Typically, this takes around 1-2 hours per layer so an operation can take as long as five to seven hours in total. So, from a patient's perspective, there is a need to reduce the Mohs surgery time by developing faster and objective ways of seeing whether the cancer has been completely removed during a shorter operation under a single local anaesthetic. Dr Notingher's technique uses an integrated optical technique based on auto-fluorescence (natural fluorescence from the tissue) and Raman spectroscopy (a highly sensitive technique using lasers to identify the molecules in a tissue sample).
Dr Notingher said: "Our technique does not rely on time consuming and laborious steps of tissue fixation, staining, labelling or sectioning. The beauty is that it can be automated and very objective. To make this new technique suitable for use in the middle of an operation such as Mohs surgery for BCC, we have combined tissue auto-fluorescence, which is quick and good at picking out all the cancer cells (but not at excluding normal tissue) as a first step, followed by Raman scattering, a rather slow but good at separating normal from cancer tissue. By combining these two methods into one technique high accuracy diagnosis of BCC can be obtained in only a few minutes."
Professor Hywel Williams, one of the dermatologists working in the team and Director of the Centre for Evidence Based Dermatology (CEBD) at The University of Nottingham, said: "I am now convinced that this technique is reliable and potentially fast enough to replace conventional methods that determine tumour clearance for basal cell carcinoma removed during Mohs micrographic surgery -- an advance that will increase the accessibility of Mohs to many more people across the world.
"
"
Subscribe to:
Post Comments (Atom)
Search
Popular Posts
-
A team of scientists using NASA's Hubble Space Telescope has made the most detailed global map yet of the glow from a planet orbiti...
-
Aug. 29, 2013 — The age at which children learn a second language can have a significant bearing on the structure of their adult brain, ...
-
Nov. 2, 2013 — It doesn't take a Watson to realize that even the world's best supercomputers are staggeringly inefficient and ene...
-
Oct. 3, 2013 — Scientists have revealed nearly 100 genetic variants implicated in the development of cancers such as breast cancer and pr...
-
Nov. 1, 2013 — It was once thought that each cell in a person's body possesses the same DNA code and that the particular way the geno...
-
Oct. 30, 2013 — Video gaming causes increases in the brain regions responsible for spatial orientation, memory formation and strategic pl...
-
What you'll need: A plastic comb (or an inflated balloon) A narrow stream of water from a tap Dry hair Instructions: Tu...
-
Aug. 26, 2013 — Where did the Chelyabinsk meteorite come from? As a meteoroid, it either collided with another body in the solar system ...
-
Dec. 13, 2013 — South Pole Telescope scientists have detected for the first time a subtle distortion in the oldest light in the universe,...
-
This image shows two of the galaxy clusters Aug. 1, 2013 — Our universe is filled with gobs of galaxies, bound together by gravity...
Recent Posts
Sample Text
Blog Archive
-
▼
2013
(421)
-
▼
September
(151)
- Ancient Soils Reveal Clues to Early Life On Earth
- Engineers Build Computer Using Carbon Nanotube Tec...
- 'Jekyll and Hyde' Star Morphs from Radio to X-Ray ...
- Oldest Lizard-Like Fossil Yet to Be Found Hints at...
- Enormous Catalog of More Than 300,000 Nearby Galaxies
- World Record Solar Cell With 44.7% Efficiency
- Math Explains History: Simulation Accurately Captu...
- Scientists Closer to Universal Flu Vaccine After P...
- Chasing the 'Black Holes' of the Ocean
- Optical Properties of a Novel Kind of Magnetism Pr...
- NASA Curiosity Rover Detects No Methane On Mars
- Formation of Unusual Ring of Radiation Around Eart...
- Novel Gene Discovery Could Lead to New HIV Treatments
- Beyond Quantum Simulation: Physicists Create 'Crys...
- Stem Cell Reprogramming Made Easier
- Four New Species of 'Legless Lizards' Discovered L...
- Clues to Growth of Colossus in Coma Cluster of Gal...
- Scientists Reveal How Beta-Amyloid May Cause Alzhe...
- Seismologists Puzzle Over Largest Deep Earthquake ...
- Giant Prehistoric Elephant Slaughtered by Early Hu...
- Earth Expected to Be Habitable for Another 1.75 Bi...
- Toxoplasma Infection Permanently Shifts Balance in...
- Coma: Researchers Observe Never-Before-Detected Br...
- Controlling Wettability: 'Sticky Tape' for Water D...
- Uncovering Cancer's Inner Workings by Capturing Li...
- Hubble Catches a Spiral in the Air Pump
- Death and Disability from Air Pollution Down 35 Pe...
- Dinosaur Wind Tunnel Test Provides New Insight Int...
- Algorithm Finds Missing Phytoplankton in Southern ...
- Wetlands More Cost-Effective in Nutrient Removal, ...
- Environmental Complexity Promotes Biodiversity
- Heavily Logged Forests Still Valuable for Tropical...
- Model of Dangerous Bee Disease in Jersey Provides ...
- Wide-Faced Men Make Others Act Selfishly
- Who Was Eating Salmon 45,000 Years Ago in the Cauc...
- Stronger Winds May Explain Puzzling Growth of Sea ...
- Human Activity Affects Vertical Structure of Atmos...
- Video Games Improve Your Motion Perception, but On...
- Extremely Potent, Improved Derivatives of Successf...
- Invention Jet Prints Nanostructures With Self-Asse...
- Get Ready for Rosetta's Wake-Up Call With Activity...
- Balloon-Borne Astronomy Experiment X-Calibur Racin...
- Fireballs in Jupiter's Atmosphere Observed by Amat...
- New Catalyzer to Avoid Environmental Pollution fro...
- Harnessing the Sun's Energy With Tiny Particles
- New Technology for Bioseparation
- Off-Hour Truck Deliveries in Manhattan Reduce Traf...
- Machine Learning Used to Boil Down the Stories Tha...
- Snake Robot On Mars?
- iPad App Teaches Students Key Skill for Success in...
- When Technology Merges With Healthcare: Mobile Dia...
- Speeding Up Cancer Diagnosis During Surgery
- Smartphone 'Microscope' Can Detect a Single Virus,...
- Energy from Tides and Currents: Best Arrangement o...
- Clean Energy Least Costly to Power America's Elect...
- Researchers Study Ways to Make Stronger Materials ...
- Weak Charge of Proton Determined for First Time
- Biologists Develop New Method for Discovering Anti...
- How Birds Got Their Wings: Fossil Data Show Scalin...
- Scientists Use 'Wired Microbes' to Generate Electr...
- Light Steered in New Directions: 2-D Material Coul...
- How and Where Imagination Occurs in Human Brains
- Feeling Small: Fingers Can Detect Nano-Scale Wrink...
- Magnetic Jet Shows How Stars Begin Their Final Tra...
- Time Is in the Eye of the Beholder: Time Perceptio...
- Quantum Entanglement Only Dependent Upon Area
- Achilles' Heel of Ice Shelves Is Beneath the Water...
- Spider Silk Coated With Carbon Nanotubes Has Multi...
- Catastrophic Collapse of Ice Lake Created Aram Cha...
- Changes in Saturn's Moon Titan’s Surface Brightnes...
- Super Efficient Combustion Engine Emits Half the C...
- To Touch the Microcosmos: New Haptic Microscope Te...
- 'Terminator' Polymer: Self-Healing Polymer That Sp...
- Low Omega-3 Could Explain Why Some Children Strugg...
- Tiny Plankton Could Have Big Impact On Climate: CO...
- Get Touchy Feely With Plants: Gently Rubbing Them ...
- Viruses Associated With Coral Epidemic of 'White P...
- Scientists Discover Cosmic Factory for Making Buil...
- Biochemists Resurrect 'Molecular Fossils': Finding...
- Simple Textiles Can Be Used With Catalysts to Enab...
- The '50-50' Chip: Memory Device of the Future? Mat...
- Scientists Achieve Highest Open-Circuit Voltage fo...
- Software May Be Able to Take Over from Hardware in...
- Dogs' Behavior Could Help Design Social Robots
- Insights Into Evolution of Life On Earth from One ...
- Take a Virtual Tour of Vesta With New High Resolut...
- Cilantro, That Favorite Salsa Ingredient, Purifies...
- Functioning 'Mechanical Gears' Seen in Nature for ...
- Genes Linked to Being Right Or Left-Handed Identified
- NASA's Voyager 1 Spacecraft Embarks On Historic Jo...
- Darwin's Dilemma Resolved: Evolution's 'Big Bang' ...
- Hubble Uncovers Largest Known Population of Star C...
- The Inside of the Milky Way Galaxy in 3-D
- Orangutans Plan Their Future Route and Communicate...
- The Final Nail in the Jurassic Park Coffin? Next G...
- Paleorivers Across Sahara May Have Supported Ancie...
- Quantum Temperature: Scientists Study the Physics ...
- New 'Artificial Nose' Device Can Speed Diagnosis o...
- Extreme Life Forms: Life Found in the Sediments of...
- Possibility of Selectively Erasing Unwanted Memories
-
▼
September
(151)
0 comments:
Post a Comment