Abstract

Most of the human cancers occur in epithelial tissues containing basic cells with different shapes, and not only do the spectral properties of the tissue pigments alter due to cancer, but the cellular architecture also change. However, in optical diagnosis of the cancerous tissues, attention has been paid to the spectral changeover of native chromophores as bio-markers. Here, we have attempted to assay the structural alterations of the epithelial tissues during the cancer progression utilizing Laser induced fluorescence (LIF) spectroscopy as a fast, sensitive and easy-to-use method. In this regard, angular dependence of the LIF spectral features of the healthy and cancerous epithelial tissues (soaked in Rhodamine 6G solution) from three different human organs i. e. uterus, colon and kidney with distinct microstructures have been examined. In general, both wavelength and intensity at the peak of the LIF spectra depend on the tissue orientation and the angle of detection respect to the laser beam direction. Those optical parameters also demonstrate distinctive alterations in different tissues that is explicated based on the morphological alteration of the epithelial cells in each carcinoma type provided by pathology data.

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