Near-Infrared Intraoperative Chemiluminescence Imaging

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Abstract

Intraoperative imaging technologies recently entered the operating room, and their implementation is revolutionizing how physicians plan, monitor, and perform surgical interventions. In this work, we present a novel surgical imaging reporter system: intraoperative chemiluminescence imaging (ICI). To this end, we have leveraged the ability of a chemiluminescent metal complex to generate near-infrared light upon exposure to an aqueous solution of Ce4+in the presence of reducing tissue or blood components. An optical camera spatially resolves the resulting photon flux. We describe the construction and application of a prototype imaging setup, which achieves a detection limit as low as 6.9 pmol cm−2of the transition-metal-based ICI agent. As a proof of concept, we use ICI for the in vivo detection of our transition metal tracer following both systemic and subdermal injections. The very high signal-to-noise ratios make ICI an interesting candidate for the development of new intraoperative imaging technologies.

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Büchel, G. E., Carney, B., Shaffer, T. M., Tang, J., Austin, C., Arora, M., … Reiner, T. (2016). Near-Infrared Intraoperative Chemiluminescence Imaging. ChemMedChem, 1978–1982. https://doi.org/10.1002/cmdc.201600301

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