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Near-infrared fluorescent type II quantum dots for sentinel lymph node mapping.

PubMed
Authors: Kim S, Lim YT, Soltesz EG, De Grand AM, Lee J, Nakayama A, Parker JA, Mihaljevic T, Laurence RG, Dor DM, Cohn LH, Bawendi MG, Frangioni JV

Year

2004

Paper ID

12949

Status

Peer-reviewed

Abstract Read

~2 min

Abstract Words

157

Citations

N/A

Abstract

The use of near-infrared or infrared photons is a promising approach for biomedical imaging in living tissue. This technology often requires exogenous contrast agents with combinations of hydrodynamic diameter, absorption, quantum yield and stability that are not possible with conventional organic fluorophores. Here we show that the fluorescence emission of type II quantum dots can be tuned into the near infrared while preserving absorption cross-section, and that a polydentate phosphine coating renders them soluble, disperse and stable in serum. We then demonstrate that these quantum dots allow a major cancer surgery, sentinel lymph node mapping, to be performed in large animals under complete image guidance. Injection of only 400 pmol of near-infrared quantum dots permits sentinel lymph nodes 1 cm deep to be imaged easily in real time using excitation fluence rates of only 5 mW/cm(2). Taken together, the chemical, optical and in vivo data presented in this study demonstrate the potential of near-infrared quantum dots for biomedical imaging.

Why This Paper Matters

  • This paper contributes to the Spin Qubits & Silicon Quantum Computing research area in the Quantum Articles archive.
  • It adds a 2004 reference point for readers tracking recent quantum research.
  • The use of near-infrared or infrared photons is a promising approach for biomedical imaging in living tissue.

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