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Evaluation of Formalin Fixation for Tissue Biopsies Using Shear Wave Laser Speckle Imaging System

Chemical fixation is the slowest and often the most uncontrolled step in the multi-step process of preparing tissue for histopathology. In order to reduce the time from taking a core needle biopsy to making a diagnosis, a new approach is proposed that optically monitors the common formalin fixation...

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Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: IEEE 2019
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6500782/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/31065465
http://dx.doi.org/10.1109/JTEHM.2019.2909914
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description Chemical fixation is the slowest and often the most uncontrolled step in the multi-step process of preparing tissue for histopathology. In order to reduce the time from taking a core needle biopsy to making a diagnosis, a new approach is proposed that optically monitors the common formalin fixation process. A low-cost and highly-sensitive laser speckle imaging technique is developed to measure shear wave velocity in a biospecimen as small as 0.5 mm in thickness submerged in millifluidic channels. Shear wave velocity, which is the indicator of tissue mechanical property and induced by piezoelectric-actuation, was monitored using gelatin phantom and chicken breast during fixation, as well as post-fixed liver and colon tissues from human. Fixation levels in terms of shear wave velocity increased by approximately 271.0% and 130.8% in gelatin phantom and chicken breast, respectively, before reaching the plateaus at 10.91 m/s and 7.88 m/s. Within these small specimens, the plateaus levels and times varied with location of measurement, and between gelatin and chicken breast. This optical-based approach demonstrates the feasibility of fine-tuning preanalytical variables, such as fixation time, for a rapid and accurate histopathological evaluation; provides a quality metric during the tissue preparation protocol performed in most pathology labs; and introduces the millifluidic chamber that can be engineered to be a future disposable device that automates biopsy processing and imaging.
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spelling pubmed-65007822019-05-07 Evaluation of Formalin Fixation for Tissue Biopsies Using Shear Wave Laser Speckle Imaging System IEEE J Transl Eng Health Med Article Chemical fixation is the slowest and often the most uncontrolled step in the multi-step process of preparing tissue for histopathology. In order to reduce the time from taking a core needle biopsy to making a diagnosis, a new approach is proposed that optically monitors the common formalin fixation process. A low-cost and highly-sensitive laser speckle imaging technique is developed to measure shear wave velocity in a biospecimen as small as 0.5 mm in thickness submerged in millifluidic channels. Shear wave velocity, which is the indicator of tissue mechanical property and induced by piezoelectric-actuation, was monitored using gelatin phantom and chicken breast during fixation, as well as post-fixed liver and colon tissues from human. Fixation levels in terms of shear wave velocity increased by approximately 271.0% and 130.8% in gelatin phantom and chicken breast, respectively, before reaching the plateaus at 10.91 m/s and 7.88 m/s. Within these small specimens, the plateaus levels and times varied with location of measurement, and between gelatin and chicken breast. This optical-based approach demonstrates the feasibility of fine-tuning preanalytical variables, such as fixation time, for a rapid and accurate histopathological evaluation; provides a quality metric during the tissue preparation protocol performed in most pathology labs; and introduces the millifluidic chamber that can be engineered to be a future disposable device that automates biopsy processing and imaging. IEEE 2019-04-09 /pmc/articles/PMC6500782/ /pubmed/31065465 http://dx.doi.org/10.1109/JTEHM.2019.2909914 Text en 2168-2372 © 2019 IEEE. Translations and content mining are permitted for academic research only. Personal use is also permitted, but republication/redistribution requires IEEE permission. See http://www.ieee.org/publications_standards/publications/rights/index.html for more information.
spellingShingle Article
Evaluation of Formalin Fixation for Tissue Biopsies Using Shear Wave Laser Speckle Imaging System
title Evaluation of Formalin Fixation for Tissue Biopsies Using Shear Wave Laser Speckle Imaging System
title_full Evaluation of Formalin Fixation for Tissue Biopsies Using Shear Wave Laser Speckle Imaging System
title_fullStr Evaluation of Formalin Fixation for Tissue Biopsies Using Shear Wave Laser Speckle Imaging System
title_full_unstemmed Evaluation of Formalin Fixation for Tissue Biopsies Using Shear Wave Laser Speckle Imaging System
title_short Evaluation of Formalin Fixation for Tissue Biopsies Using Shear Wave Laser Speckle Imaging System
title_sort evaluation of formalin fixation for tissue biopsies using shear wave laser speckle imaging system
topic Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6500782/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/31065465
http://dx.doi.org/10.1109/JTEHM.2019.2909914
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