Deep photothermal effect induced by stereotactic laser beams in highly scattering media.

Autor: Baez-Castillo L, Ortiz-Rascón E, Carrillo-Torres RC, Bruce NC, Garduño-Mejía J, Lucero-Acuña A, Álvarez-Ramos ME
Jazyk: angličtina
Zdroj: Optics letters [Opt Lett] 2021 Sep 01; Vol. 46 (17), pp. 4248-4251.
DOI: 10.1364/OL.433429
Abstrakt: Plasmonic photothermal therapy (PPTT), as an increasingly studied treatment alternative, has been widely regarded mostly as a surface tissue treatment choice. Although some techniques have been implemented for interstitial tumors, these involve some grade of invasiveness, as the outer skin is usually broken to introduce light-delivering optical fibers or even catheters. In this work, we present a potential non-invasive strategy using the stereotactic approach, long employed in radiosurgery, by converging multiple near infrared laser beams for PPTT in tissue-equivalent optical phantoms that enclose small gel spheres and simulate interstitial tissue impregnated with plasmonic nanoparticles. The real-time in-depth monitoring of temperature increase is realized by an infrared camera face-on mounted over the phantom. Our results show that a significant reduction in the surface heating can be achieved with this configuration while remarkably increasing the interstitial reach of PPTT, assuring a ∼6 C temperature increase for the simulated tumors at 10 mm depth and ∼4 C at 15 mm depth and opening up new possibilities for future clinical applications.
Databáze: MEDLINE