Title
Biochemical imaging of human atherosclerotic plaques with fluorescence lifetime angioscopy
Date Issued
01 May 2010
Access level
metadata only access
Resource Type
research article
Author(s)
Thomas P.
Pande P.
Clubb F.
Adame J.
Abstract
A prototype angioscopy system with fluorescence lifetime imaging microscopy (FLIM) capabilities was built and applied for biochemical imaging of human coronary atherosclerotic plaques. The FLIM angioscopy prototype consisted of a thin flexible angioscope suitable for UV-excited autofluorescence imaging, and a FLIM detection system based on a pulse sampling approach. The angioscope was composed of an imaging bundle attached to a gradient index objective lens and surrounded by a ring of illumination fibers (2 mm outer diameter, 50 μm spatial resolution). For FLIM detection based on the pulse sampling approach, a gated-intensified charge-couple device camera (200 ps temporal resolution) was used. Autofluorescence was excited with a pulsed UV laser (337 nm) and FLIM images were acquired at three emission bands (390/40 nm, 450/40 nm, 550/88 nm). The system was characterized on standard fluorophores and then used to image postmortem human coronary arteries. The FLIM angioscope allowed us to distinguish elastin-dominant plaques (peak emission at 450 nm, ∼1.5 ns lifetimes) from collagen-dominant plaques (peak emission at 390 n, ∼2-3 ns lifetimes) based on their intrinsic fluorescence spectral and lifetime differences. This study demonstrates the potential of FLIM angioscopy for biochemical imaging of human coronary atherosclerotic plaques.
Start page
727
End page
731
Volume
86
Issue
3
Language
English
OCDE Knowledge area
Bioquímica, Biología molecular
Scopus EID
2-s2.0-77951846143
PubMed ID
Source
Photochemistry and Photobiology
ISSN of the container
00318655
Sponsor(s)
National Cancer Institute
Sources of information: Directorio de Producción Científica Scopus