Login
Home
→
Research Collections
→
Interdisciplinary and Peer-Reviewed
→
View Item
JavaScript is disabled for your browser. Some features of this site may not work without it.
Raman spectral signatures of mouse mammary tissue and associated lymph nodes: normal, tumor and mastitis
Thakur, Jagdish S.; Dai, Houbei; Serhatkulu, Gulay K.; Naik, Ratna; Naik, Vaman M.; Cao, Alex; Pandya, Abhilash; Auner, Gregory W.; Rabah, Rajah; Klein, Michael D.; Freeman, Carl
2007-02
Citation:
Thakur, Jagdish S.; Dai, Houbei; Serhatkulu, Gulay K.; Naik, Ratna; Naik, Vaman M.; Cao, Alex; Pandya, Abhilash; Auner, Gregory W.; Rabah, Rajah; Klein, Michael D.; Freeman, Carl (2007). "Raman spectral signatures of mouse mammary tissue and associated lymph nodes: normal, tumor and mastitis." Journal of Raman Spectroscopy 38(2): 127-134. <http://hdl.handle.net/2027.42/55947>
Abstract:
Raman spectroscopy involves the interaction of light with the molecular vibrations and therefore can provide information about molecular structure, tissue composition and changes in its environment. We explored whether Raman spectroscopy can reliably distinguish mammary tumors from normal mammary tissues and other pathological states in mice. We analyzed a large number of Raman spectra from the tumor and normal mammary glands of mice injected with 4T1 tumor cells, which were collected using a high-resolution (less than 4 cm −1 ) Raman spectrometer at a fixed (785 nm) laser excitation wavelength and with 60 mW of laser power. The spectra of normal and tumor mammary glands showed consistent differences in the intensity of certain Raman bands and loss of some bands in the tumor spectra. Multivariate statistical methods—principal component analysis (PCA) and discriminant functional analysis (DFA)—were used to separate the data into different groups of mammary tumors, mastitis, lymph nodes contralateral and tumor-cell-injected sides, and normal contralateral and tumor-cell-injected sides. We demonstrate that this spectroscopic technique has the feasibility of discriminating tumor and mastitis from normal tissues and other pathological states in a short period of time and may detect tumor transformation earlier than the standard histological examination stage. Copyright © 2006 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd.
ISSN:
0377-0486, 1097-4555
DOIs:
http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/jrs.1565
Handle:
http://hdl.handle.net/2027.42/55947
Show full item record
Download
Name:
1565_ftp.pdf
Size:
983.2KB
Format:
PDF
This item appears in the following Collection(s)
Interdisciplinary and Peer-Reviewed
Pathology, Department of
Search Deep Blue
Search query
Advanced Search
Browse by
Communities & Collections
Titles
Authors
Subjects
Date
My Account
Login
Information
About Deep Blue
Help
Contact Us