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Exploring the utility of Deep Red Anthraquinone 5 for digital staining of ex vivo confocal micrographs of optically sectioned skin
Author(s) -
Ortner Vinzent Kevin,
Sahu Aditi,
Cordova Miguel,
Kose Kivanc,
Aleissa Saud,
AlessiFox Christi,
Haedersdal Merete,
Rajadhyaksha Milind,
Rossi Anthony Mario
Publication year - 2021
Publication title -
journal of biophotonics
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.877
H-Index - 66
eISSN - 1864-0648
pISSN - 1864-063X
DOI - 10.1002/jbio.202000207
Subject(s) - staining , acridine orange , confocal , stain , ex vivo , fluorescence , pathology , eosin , microscopy , confocal microscopy , anthraquinone , alizarin red , chemistry , in vivo , biology , optics , medicine , physics , microbiology and biotechnology , organic chemistry
We investigated the utility of the fluorescent dye Deep Red Anthraquinone 5 (DRAQ5) for digital staining of optically sectioned skin in comparison to acridine orange (AO). Eight fresh‐frozen thawed Mohs discard tissue specimens were stained with AO and DRAQ5, and imaged using an ex vivo confocal microscope at three wavelengths (488 nm and 638 nm for fluorescence, 785 nm for reflectance). Images were overlaid (AO + Reflectance, DRAQ5 + Reflectance), digitally stained, and evaluated by three investigators for perceived image quality (PIQ) and histopathological feature identification. In addition to nuclear staining, AO seemed to stain dermal fibers in a subset of cases in digitally stained images, while DRAQ5 staining was more specific to nuclei. Blinded evaluation showed substantial agreement, favoring DRAQ5 for PIQ (82%, Cl 75%‐90%, Gwet's AC 0.74) and for visualization of histopathological features in (81%, Cl 73%‐89%, Gwet's AC 0.67), supporting its use in digital staining of multimodal confocal micrographs of skin.