Discrimination of Benign and Malignant Lesions in Canine Mammary Tissue Samples Using Raman Spectroscopy: A Pilot Study

Breast cancer is a health problem that affects individual life quality and the family system. It is the most frequent type of cancer in women, but men are also affected. As an integrative approach, comparative oncology offers an opportunity to learn more about natural cancers in different species. M...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Dantas, Diana (author)
Other Authors: Soares, Liliana (author), Novais, Susana (author), Vilarinho, Rui (author), Agostinho Moreira, Joaquim (author), Silva, Susana (author), Frazão, Orlando (author), Oliveira, Teresa (author), Leal, Nuno (author), Faísca, Pedro (author), Reis, Joana (author)
Format: article
Language:por
Published: 2020
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/10174/28523
Country:Portugal
Oai:oai:dspace.uevora.pt:10174/28523
Description
Summary:Breast cancer is a health problem that affects individual life quality and the family system. It is the most frequent type of cancer in women, but men are also affected. As an integrative approach, comparative oncology offers an opportunity to learn more about natural cancers in different species. Methods based on Raman spectroscopy have shown significant potential in the study of the human breast through the fingerprinting of biological tissue, which provides valuable information that can be used to identify, characterize and discriminate structures in breast tissue, in both healthy and carcinogenic environments. One of the most important applications of Raman spectroscopy in medical diagnosis is the characterization of microcalcifications, which are highly important diagnostic indicators of breast tissue diseases. Raman spectroscopy has been used to analyze the chemical composition of microcalcifications. These occur in benign and malignant lesions in the human breast, and Raman helps to discriminate microcalcifications as type I and type II according to their composition. This paper demonstrates the recent progress in understanding how this vibrational technique can discriminate through the fingerprint regions of lesions in unstained histology sections from canine mammary glands.