SIMS microscopy in the biomedical field

We attempted to indicate the requirements for biomedical applications of SIMS microscopy. Sample preparation methodology should preserve both the structural and the chemical integrity of the tissue. Furthermore, it is often necessary to correlate ionic and light microscope images. This implies a com...

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Veröffentlicht in:Biology of the Cell 1992, Vol.74 (1), p.5-18
Hauptverfasser: Fragu, Philippe, Briançon, Colette, Fourré, Catherine, Clerc, Jérôme, Casiraghi, Odile, Jeusset, Josette, Omri, Frédérique, Halpern, Sylvain
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:We attempted to indicate the requirements for biomedical applications of SIMS microscopy. Sample preparation methodology should preserve both the structural and the chemical integrity of the tissue. Furthermore, it is often necessary to correlate ionic and light microscope images. This implies a common methodological approach to sample preparation for both microscopes. The use of low or high mass resolution depends on the elements studied and their concentrations. To improve the acquisition and processing of images, digital imaging systems have to be designed and require both ionic and optical image superimposition. However, the images do not accurately reflect element concentration; a relative quantitative approach is possible by measuring secondary ion beam intensity. Using an internal reference element (carbon) and standard curves the results are expressed in μg/mg of tissue. Despite their limited lateral resolution (0.5 μm) the actual SIMS microscopes are very suitable for the resolution of biomedical problems posed by action modes and drug localization in human pathology. SIMS microscopy should provide a new tool for metabolic radiotherapy. by facilitating dose evaluation. The advent of high lateral resolution SIMS imaging (< 0.1 μm) should open up new fields in biomedical investigation.
ISSN:0248-4900
1768-322X
DOI:10.1016/0248-4900(92)90004-K