Issue 10, 2004

A decade of vibrational micro-spectroscopy of human cells and tissue (1994–2004)

Abstract

Instrumentation used in infrared microspectroscopy (IR-MSP) permits the acquisition of spectra from samples as small as 100 pg (10−10 g), and as small as 1 pg for Raman microspectroscopy (RA-MSP). This, in turn, allows the acquisition of spectral data from objects as small as fractions of human cells, and of small regions of microtome tissue sections. Since vibrational spectroscopy is exquisitely sensitive to the biochemical composition of the sample, and variations therein, it is possible to monitor metabolic processes in tissue and cells, and to construct spectral maps based on thousands of IR spectra collected from pixels of tissue. These images, in turn, reveal information on tissue structure, distribution of cellular components, metabolic activity and state of health of cells and tissue.

Article information

Article type
Critical Review
Submitted
11 Jun 2004
Accepted
13 Aug 2004
First published
27 Aug 2004

Analyst, 2004,129, 880-885

A decade of vibrational micro-spectroscopy of human cells and tissue (1994–2004)

M. Diem, M. Romeo, S. Boydston-White, M. Miljković and C. Matthäus, Analyst, 2004, 129, 880 DOI: 10.1039/B408952A

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