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New miniature, hand-held microscope easily identifies brain tumours

Washington, Nov 12 (ANI): Neurosurgeons at Barrow Neurological Institute at St. Joseph's Hospital and Medical Centre have developed a new microscope that will help easily identify brain tumours and precisely remove it during surgery.

The new miniature laser confocal microscope helps see brain tumour regions during surgery and obtain digital images of the tumour and brain tissue.

This was not previously possible without taking biopsies of the tissue.

The microscope captures the image of the tissue after a fluorescent drug is injected into the patient and travels into the tumour.

The researchers could distinguish cancer cells and the margin of the brain tumour without taking a biopsy.

They also found that it was possible to obtain a digital video of the brain tumour to show blood flowing through the abnormal vessels of the tumour and the transition from normal to abnormal brain tissue.

Conventional methods include obtaining several specimens from within a brain tumour using biopsy forceps and cutting, freezing and staining the specimen for examination under the microscope.

It is limited by sampling error and by mechanical tissue damage from the biopsy forceps, slowing operative workflow by 30 to 40 minutes.

The new microscope can overcome these limitations by helping to visualize the cellular and tissue features of a tumour in real-time.

"As neuropathologists become familiar with the new confocal microscopic appearance of various tumor types and grades, the traditional intraoperative diagnosis may be replaced by the real-time analysis of confocal images by the new microscope," said Dr Mark Preul, Newsome Chair of Neurosurgery Research at Barrow.

These images could be analyzed remotely, improving the accuracy of intraoperative diagnosis. (ANI)

Hand-held devices that can detect presence of aerosols in air above oceans

Washington, June 30 (ANI): A team of scientists is developing hand-held devices that can detect the presence of aerosols in air above oceans by measuring how light scatters as it strikes the particles.The portable photometers have been developed by Alexander Smirnov, an AERONET (Aerosol Robotic Network) project scientist at NASA's Goddard Space Flight Center, Greenbelt, Maryland, and his team.Aerosols, the tiny atmospheric particles that can have an outsized impact on the climate, are just as likely to be found.....
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