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Studying inner workings of cancer cells in 3-D

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Hank Hogan

Doctors would like to achieve early cancer detection in a clinical setting without resorting to contrast agents or invasive techniques. Now researchers at Duke University in Durham, N.C., and at the University of Wisconsin-Madison have demonstrated noninvasive photonics-based techniques that could someday be used for just that. They used multiphoton microscopy and near-infrared excitation to image cancer in vivo. Duke associate professor of biomedical engineering Nirmala Ramanujam said that the microscopy technique let them access organs of interest without surgery or needles. “Multiphoton...Read full article

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    Published: February 2008
    biomedicalBiophotonicscancer detectionMicroscopymultiphoton microscopyNews & FeaturesSensors & Detectors

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