Network


Latest external collaboration on country level. Dive into details by clicking on the dots.

Hotspot


Dive into the research topics where Eugene B. Hanlon is active.

Publication


Featured researches published by Eugene B. Hanlon.


Physics in Medicine and Biology | 2000

Prospects for in vivo Raman spectroscopy.

Eugene B. Hanlon; Tae-Woong Koo; Karen Shafer; Jason T. Motz; Maryann Fitzmaurice; John R. Kramer; Irving Itzkan; Ramachandra R. Dasari; Michael S. Feld

Raman spectroscopy is a potentially important clinical tool for real-time diagnosis of disease and in situ evaluation of living tissue. The purpose of this article is to review the biological and physical basis of Raman spectroscopy of tissue, to assess the current status of the field and to explore future directions. The principles of Raman spectroscopy and the molecular level information it provides are explained. An overview of the evolution of Raman spectroscopic techniques in biology and medicine, from early investigations using visible laser excitation to present-day technology based on near-infrared laser excitation and charge-coupled device array detection, is presented. State-of-the-art Raman spectrometer systems for research laboratory and clinical settings are described. Modern methods of multivariate spectral analysis for extracting diagnostic, chemical and morphological information are reviewed. Several in-depth applications are presented to illustrate the methods of collecting, processing and analysing data, as well as the range of medical applications under study. Finally, the issues to be addressed in implementing Raman spectroscopy in various clinical applications, as well as some long-term directions for future study, are discussed.


Applied Spectroscopy | 1998

Extremely Large Enhancement Factors in Surface-Enhanced Raman Scattering for Molecules on Colloidal Gold Clusters

Katrin Kneipp; Harald Kneipp; Eugene B. Hanlon; Irving Itzkan; Ramachandra R. Dasari; Michael S. Feld

In agreement with previous results reported for colloidal silver clusters, effective surface-enhanced Raman cross sections of about 10-16 cm2 per molecule, corresponding to enhancement factors on the order of 1014, have also been obtained for molecules attached to colloidal gold clusters. Spatially isolated nearly spherical colloidal gold particles of about 60 nm size show maximum enhancement factors on the order of 103 at 514 nm excitation, close to the single plasmon resonance. The enhancement factor increases by eleven orders of magnitude when colloidal gold clusters are formed by aggregation of the gold colloids and when near-infrared excitation is applied. The large effective surface-enhanced Raman cross section has been estimated by a straightforward method based on steady-state population redistribution due to the pumping of molecules to the first excited vibrational state via the strongly enhanced Raman process. Our experimental finding confirms the important role of colloidal clusters for extremely large surface-enhanced Raman scattering (SERS) enhancement factors. Simultaneously, it suggests colloidal gold clusters as a substrate for high-sensitivity surface-enhanced Raman scattering, which can provide an enhancement level sufficient for Raman single molecule detection. Due to its chemical inactivity, gold might have some advantages compared to silver, particularly in biomedical spectroscopy.


Optics Letters | 2000

Interferometric phase-dispersion microscopy

Changhuei Yang; Adam Wax; Irene Georgakoudi; Eugene B. Hanlon; Kamran Badizadegan; Ramachandra R. Dasari; Michael S. Feld

We describe a new scanning microscopy technique, phase-dispersion microscopy (PDM). The technique is based on measuring the phase difference between the fundamental and the second-harmonic light in a novel interferometer. PDM is highly sensitive to subtle refractive-index differences that are due to dispersion (differential optical path sensitivity, 5 nm). We apply PDM to measure minute amounts of DNA in solution and to study biological tissue sections. We demonstrate that PDM performs better than conventional phase-contrast microscopy in imaging dispersive and weakly scattering samples.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2007

Confocal light absorption and scattering spectroscopic microscopy monitors organelles in live cells with no exogenous labels

Irving Itzkan; Le Qiu; Hui Fang; Munir M. Zaman; Edward Vitkin; Ionita Ghiran; Saira Salahuddin; Mark D. Modell; Charlotte Andersson; Lauren M. Kimerer; P.B. Cipolloni; Kee-Hak Lim; Steven D. Freedman; Irving J. Bigio; Benjamin P. Sachs; Eugene B. Hanlon; Lev T. Perelman

This article reports the development of an optical imaging technique, confocal light absorption and scattering spectroscopic (CLASS) microscopy, capable of noninvasively determining the dimensions and other physical properties of single subcellular organelles. CLASS microscopy combines the principles of light-scattering spectroscopy (LSS) with confocal microscopy. LSS is an optical technique that relates the spectroscopic properties of light elastically scattered by small particles to their size, refractive index, and shape. The multispectral nature of LSS enables it to measure internal cell structures much smaller than the diffraction limit without damaging the cell or requiring exogenous markers, which could affect cell function. Scanning the confocal volume across the sample creates an image. CLASS microscopy approaches the accuracy of electron microscopy but is nondestructive and does not require the contrast agents common to optical microscopy. It provides unique capabilities to study functions of viable cells, which are beyond the capabilities of other techniques.


Nature Medicine | 2010

Multispectral scanning during endoscopy guides biopsy of dysplasia in Barrett's esophagus

Le Qiu; Douglas K. Pleskow; Ram Chuttani; Edward Vitkin; Jan Leyden; Nuri Ozden; Sara Itani; Lianyu Guo; Alana Sacks; Jeffrey D. Goldsmith; Mark D. Modell; Eugene B. Hanlon; Irving Itzkan; Lev T. Perelman

Esophageal cancer is increasing in frequency in the United States faster than any other cancer. Barretts esophagus, an otherwise benign complication of esophageal reflux, affects approximately three million Americans and precedes almost all cases of esophageal cancer. If detected as high-grade dysplasia (HGD), most esophageal cancers can be prevented. Standard-of-care screening for dysplasia uses visual endoscopy and a prescribed pattern of biopsy. This procedure, in which a tiny fraction of the affected tissue is selected for pathological examination, has a low probability of detection because dysplasia is highly focal and visually indistinguishable. We developed a system called endoscopic polarized scanning spectroscopy (EPSS), which performs rapid optical scanning and multispectral imaging of the entire esophageal surface and provides diagnoses in near real time. By detecting and mapping suspicious sites, guided biopsy of invisible, precancerous dysplasia becomes practicable. Here we report the development of EPSS and its application in several clinical cases, one of which merits special consideration.


IEEE Journal of Selected Topics in Quantum Electronics | 2003

Noninvasive sizing of subcellular organelles with light scattering spectroscopy

Hui Fang; Mario Ollero; Edward Vitkin; Lauren M. Kimerer; P.B. Cipolloni; Munir M. Zaman; Steven D. Freedman; Irving J. Bigio; Irving Itzkan; Eugene B. Hanlon; Lev T. Perelman

A long-standing impediment for applications of optical techniques in cellular biology is the inability to characterize subcellular structures whose dimensions are much less than about 1 /spl mu/m. In this paper, we describe a method based on light scattering spectroscopy that can find the size distribution of subcellular organelles as small as 100 nm with an accuracy of 20 nm. We report experiments using aqueous suspensions of subcellular organelles enriched in mitochondria, zymogen granules, and microsomes. From the observed light scattering spectra, we extract size distributions that are in excellent agreement with the results of electron microscopy. Further studies are underway to extract the shapes of organelles in addition to their sizes.


Applied Optics | 2007

Confocal light absorption and scattering spectroscopic microscopy

Hui Fang; Le Qiu; Edward Vitkin; Munir M. Zaman; Charlotte Andersson; Saira Salahuddin; Lauren M. Kimerer; P.B. Cipolloni; Mark D. Modell; Bradley S. Turner; Sarah Keates; Irving J. Bigio; Irving Itzkan; Steven D. Freedman; Rama Bansil; Eugene B. Hanlon; Lev T. Perelman

We have developed a novel optical method for observing submicrometer intracellular structures in living cells, which is called confocal light absorption and scattering spectroscopic (CLASS) microscopy. It combines confocal microscopy, a well-established high-resolution microscopic technique, with light-scattering spectroscopy. CLASS microscopy requires no exogenous labels and is capable of imaging and continuously monitoring individual viable cells, enabling the observation of cell and organelle functioning at scales of the order of 100 nm.


Nature Communications | 2011

Photon diffusion near the point-of-entry in anisotropically scattering turbid media

Edward Vitkin; Turzhitsky; Le Qiu; Lianyu Guo; Irving Itzkan; Eugene B. Hanlon; Lev T. Perelman

From astronomy to cell biology, the manner in which light propagates in turbid media has been of central importance for many decades. However, light propagation near the point-of-entry in turbid media has never been analytically described, until now. Here we report a straightforward and accurate method that overcomes this longstanding, unsolved problem in radiative transport. Our theory properly treats anisotropic photon scattering events and takes the specific form of the phase function into account. As a result, our method correctly predicts the spatially dependent diffuse reflectance of light near the point-of-entry for any arbitrary phase function. We demonstrate that the theory is in excellent agreement with both experimental results and Monte Carlo simulations for several commonly used phase functions.


Photochemistry and Photobiology | 1999

Near‐infrared Fluorescence Spectroscopy Detects Alzheimer's Disease In Vitro

Eugene B. Hanlon; Irving Itzkan; Ramachandra R. Dasari; Michael S. Feld; Robert J. Ferrante; Ann C. McKee; Devayani Lathi; Neil W. Kowall

Abstract. The purpose of this study was to investigate whether near‐infrared (NIR) fluorescence spectroscopy could be used to detect Alzheimers disease (AD) by brain tissue autofluorescence. Unfixed temporal cortex specimens from AD cases and age‐matched, non‐AD controls were frozen at autopsy and then thawed just prior to spectral measurement. Spectra of intrinsic tissue fluorescence induced by 647 nm light were recorded from 650 to 850 run. We used principal component analysis of the tissue spectra from 17 AD cases and 5 non‐AD control cases in a calibration study to establish a diagnostic algorithm. Retrospectively applied to the calibration set, the algorithm correctly classified 23 of 24 specimens. In a prospective study of 19 specimens from 5 AD brains and 2 non‐AD control brains, 3 of the 4 control specimens and all AD specimens were correctly diagnosed. Both the excitation light used and the measured brain tissue autofluorescence are at NIR wavelengths that can propagate through skull and overlying tissue. Therefore, our results demonstrate an optical spectroscopic technique that carries direct molecular level information about disease. This is the first step toward a clinical tool that has the potential to be applied to the noninvasive diagnosis of AD in living patients.


IEEE Journal of Selected Topics in Quantum Electronics | 2007

Single Gold Nanorod Detection Using Confocal Light Absorption and Scattering Spectroscopy

Le Qiu; Timothy Larson; Danielle K. Smith; Edward Vitkin; Songhua Zhang; Mark D. Modell; Irving Itzkan; Eugene B. Hanlon; Brian A. Korgel; Konstantin Sokolov; Lev T. Perelman

Gold nanorods have the potential to be employed as extremely bright molecular marker labels for fluorescence, absorption, or scattering imaging of living tissue. However, samples containing a large number of gold nanorods usually exhibit relatively wide spectral lines. This linewidth limits the use of the nanorods as effective molecular labels, since it would be rather difficult to image several types of nanorod markers simultaneously. In addition, the observed linewidth does not agree well with theoretical calculations, which predict significantly narrower absorption and scattering lines. The discrepancy could be explained by apparent broadening because of the contribution of nanorods with various sizes and aspect ratios. We measured native scattering spectra of single gold nanorods with the confocal light absorption and scattering spectroscopy system, and found that single gold nanorods have a narrow spectrum as predicted by the theory, which suggests that nanorod-based molecular markers with controlled narrow aspect ratios, and to a lesser degree size distributions, should provide spectral lines sufficiently narrow for effective biomedical imaging.

Collaboration


Dive into the Eugene B. Hanlon's collaboration.

Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Lev T. Perelman

Gubkin Russian State University of Oil and Gas

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Saira Salahuddin

Beth Israel Deaconess Medical Center

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Steven D. Freedman

Beth Israel Deaconess Medical Center

View shared research outputs
Researchain Logo
Decentralizing Knowledge