Abstract

Here, the discrimination of two types of lethal brain cancers, i.e., glioblastoma multiforme (GBM) and oligodendroglioma (OG) are investigated under the laser-induced breakdown spectroscopy (LIBS) and the electrical spark-assisted laser-induced breakdown spectroscopy (SA-LIBS) in order to discriminate the human brain glioma lesions against the infiltrated tissues. It is shown there are notable differences between the plasma emissions over the brain gliomas against those of infiltrated tissues. In fact, a notable enhancement appears in the characteristic emissions in favor of SA-LIBS against those of conventional LIB spectra. Moreover, the plasma properties such as temperature, electron density, and degree of ionization are probed through the data processing of the plasma emissions. The corresponding parameters, taken from SA-LIBS data, attest to be lucidly larger than those of LIBS up to one order of magnitude. In addition, the ionic species such as Mg II characteristic line at 279 nm and caII emission at 393 nm are notably enhanced in favor of SA-LIBS. In general, the experimental evidence verifies that SA-LIBS is beneficial in the discrimination and grading of GBM/OG neoplasia against healthy (infiltrate) tissues in the early stages.

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