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Chromophores in operative surgery: Current practice and rationalized development

Journal

JOURNAL OF CONTROLLED RELEASE
Volume 249, Issue -, Pages 123-130

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ELSEVIER
DOI: 10.1016/j.jconrel.2016.12.044

Keywords

Chromophore; Stain; Dye; Pigment; Contrast agent; Fluorophore; Optical adjunct; Ultraviolet; Infrared; Methylene blue; Patent Blue V; Bonney's blue; Indocyanine green; Porphyrin; Melanin; Triarylmethane; Triphenylmethane; Azo derivative; Phenothiazine; surgery; optical; lymphadenectomy; sentinel lymph node biopsy

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Background: Chromophore-containing molecules feature extensively in surgical practice, with synthetic dyes gaining popularity over endogenous optical adjuncts. New applications for chromophores in diagnostics and operative treatment exploit unique chemical structures suited for illuminating target tissues beyond the visual spectrum, ranging from ultraviolet (UV) to near-infrared (NIR). This review outlines the rationale for surgical chromophore application, the weaknesses and risks in each class of these compounds, and areas of foreseeable potential for employment of specialized contrast agents. Method: An English-language literature search applied the following Boolean Search String: dye OR Lake OR Stain OR chromophore AND tox$ OR terato* OR carcino$ OR Allerg$ OR surg$ OR clinic using EMBASE, PUBMED, PUBMED central and OVIDSp, with back-referencing through Web of Knowledge(TM). Results: Based on the primary literature, this study proposes a surgically relevant classification system of chromophores in current use, which facilitates risk/benefit consideration for the surgeon who employs them, and which facilitates clinically oriented development. Conclusions: The next stage of development for optically active surgical adjuncts must address practical constraints whilst minimizing risks of adverse effects. Exploiting the technology's full potential also requires improvements in the usefulness of imagery equipment. (C) 2016 Published by Elsevier B.V.

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