New imaging technology is advance for medical diagnostics, research

October 30, 2015  


Cheng Keck

Ji-Xin Cheng leads a Purdue team demonstrating a new imaging technology developed with a $1 million W.M. Keck Foundation grant. The technology could bring advanced medical diagnostics. (Vincent Walter/Purdue University image)
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WEST LAFAYETTE, Ind. – A team of researchers has demonstrated a new type of imaging system that reveals the chemical composition of living tissue for medical diagnostics and cellular studies.

The development is potentially important because knowing the chemical content of tissue is needed for early detection of disease, and the system also can be used to study molecular dynamics in living cells as they are occurring, said Ji-Xin Cheng, a professor in Purdue's Weldon School of Biomedical Engineering and Department of Chemistry and Scientific Director of the Label-free Imaging lab at Purdue's Discovery Park.

Conventional imaging technologies such as magnetic resonance imaging and computed tomography do not reveal the chemical composition of tissues, he said.

Although optical spectroscopy has been routinely used to study molecules in a sample cell, it is currently not practical to perform in-vivo spectroscopy, or the analysis of how light interacts with molecules in living tissue. This is because photons strongly scatter when light shines through tissues, making detection of the signal through a spectrometer inefficient, Cheng said.

"Our technique overcomes this problem," he said.

Findings are detailed in a research paper appearing online on Friday (Oct. 30) in the journal Science Advances.

The new technique works by "coding" individual photons from a pulsing laser with a megahertz radio frequency and then collecting those photons with a detector after they have interacted with tissue. The system was demonstrated in human breast cancer detection. Ordinarily, the cancer tissue samples would have to be processed for histological examination, which could take up to a week. The new technology yields results in about two seconds.

The technique also was used to map vitamin E in the skin of laboratory mice.

"People use vitamin E on their skin as a topical treatment, and, like any drug, we would like to know where it goes after it is applied to study drug delivery mechanisms," Cheng said. "We converted Raman spectroscopy, which is generally used to study molecules in solutions or fixed tissues, to an in-vivo imaging platform that is able to monitor how a living cell executes its functions in real time. It's a proof of concept. The approach allows us to get a spectrum of individual molecules, revealing the chemical composition of the tissues."

The innovation offers "label-free" detection, or imaging that does not require the use of fluorescent dyes or other preparations to detect structures and features. Because processing kills the tissue and is time-consuming, the label-free technology allows the study of unaltered living tissues and cells, making for more rapid and accurate studies, Cheng said.

The system was developed with a $1 million W.M. Keck Foundation grant to Cheng and his team.

The Science Advances paper was authored by graduate student Chien-Sheng Liao, postdoctoral researchers Pu Wang and Ping Wang; graduate students Junjie Li and Hyeon Jeong Lee; instrumentation specialist Gregory Eakins; and Cheng.

The work is ongoing, with future research exploring development of an "imaging pen" to quickly analyze surfaces for traces of explosives for homeland security applications and to monitor human tissue for disease and infection and to help surgeons determine whether any diseased tissue remains after cancer surgery, Cheng said.

Based in Los Angeles, the W.M. Keck Foundation was established in 1954 by the late W.M. Keck, founder of Superior Oil Co.  The foundation’s grant making is focused primarily on pioneering efforts in the areas of medical research, science and engineering and undergraduate education.  More information is available at http://www.wmkeck.org 

Writer: Emil Venere, 765-494-3470, venere@purdue.edu 

Source: Ji-Xin Cheng, 765-494-4335, jcheng@purdue.edu 

Related website: https://engineering.purdue.edu/BME/Research/Labs/Cheng


ABSTRACT

 Spectrometer-free Vibrational Imaging by Retrieving Stimulated Raman Signal from Highly Scattered Photons 

Chien-Sheng Liao#,1, Pu Wang#,1, Ping Wang1, Junjie Li2, Hyeon Jeong Lee2, Gregory Eakins3, Ji-Xin Cheng*1,3,4,5,6

1Weldon School of Biomedical Engineering, 2Department of Biological Sciences, 3Department of Chemistry, 4 Purdue University Center for Cancer Research, 5Birck Nanotechnology Center, 6School of Electrical and Computer Engineering, Purdue University

#equal contributions *corresponding: jcheng@purdue.edu

In vivo vibrational spectroscopic imaging is inhibited by relatively slow spectral acquisition on the second scale and low photon-collection efficiency for a highly scattering system. Recently developed multiplex coherent anti-Stokes Raman scattering and stimulated Raman scattering techniques have improved the spectral acquisition time down to microsecond scale. These methods using a spectrometer setting are not suitable for turbid systems in which nearly all photons are scattered. Here, we demonstrate vibrational imaging by spatial frequency multiplexing of incident photons and single photodiode detection of a stimulated Raman spectrum within 60 μs. Compared to the spectrometer setting, our method improved the photon-collection efficiency by two orders of magnitude for highly scattering specimens. In vivo imaging of vitamin E distribution on mice skin and in situ imaging of human breast cancerous tissues were demonstrated. The reported work opens new opportunities for spectroscopic imaging in a surgical room and for development of deep-tissue Raman spectroscopy towards molecular level diagnosis. 


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