DOI 10.17586/0021-3454-2023-66-2-148-154
UDC 53.082.531
USE OF A FIBER OPTIC SPECTROMETER TO ASSESS THE MINIMUM NUMBER OF MALIGNANT CELLS BY DIFFUSE REFLECTANCE SPECTRA IN THE NEAR INFRARED REGION
ITMO University; Research Engineer
A. V. Panchenko
Research Institute of Medical Primatology;
A. A. Surkova
Samara State Technical University ; Researcher
D. O. Kirsanov
ITMO University, Saint Petersburg, Russia; Saint Petersburg State University, Saint Petersburg, Russia; Leading engineer; Associate professor
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Abstract. The aim of the study was to develop a technique for assessing the minimum number of malignant cells recognizable by their diffuse reflectance spectra obtained in the near infrared region (NIR) using compact spectrometric equipment. In the course of the study, a culture of ovarian cancer cells was prepared for subcutaneous injection into laboratory mice; solutions with various concentrations of such cells were prepared to create a calibration scale. Measurement of NIR spectra was carried out on live laboratory mice (at pre-marked points) under anesthesia before puncture and after the introduction of cell culture. Spectral characteristics that are sensitive to changes in the number of cells at the measurement point (peak intensity, baseline shift) have been identified, and the minimum reliably recognizable number of malignant tumor cells has been estimated from the graph of the dependence of the absorption value at a wavelength of 1200 nm on the logarithm of the number of cells in solution.
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