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Laser‐Induced Fluorescence (LIF) Recognition of the Structural Composition of Porcine Heart Valves
Author(s) -
Christov Alexander M.,
Liu Liying,
Lowe Shoshona,
Icton Carolyn,
DunmoreBuyze Joy,
Boughner Derek R.,
Dai Erbin,
Lucas Alexandra
Publication year - 1999
Publication title -
photochemistry and photobiology
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.818
H-Index - 131
eISSN - 1751-1097
pISSN - 0031-8655
DOI - 10.1111/j.1751-1097.1999.tb03302.x
Subject(s) - fluorescence , elastin , materials science , laser , biomedical engineering , heart valve , excimer laser , excimer , chemistry , pathology , cardiology , medicine , optics , physics
— Reconstruction and replacement of heart valves with grafts from pig tissue is a common procedure. However, bioprosthetic valves wear out in a shorter time span than mechanical valves. Bioprosthetic valve structure may contribute to degenerative changes that lead to valve failure. There is, at present, no method to examine the structure of a tissue valve prior to implant. Laser‐induced fluorescence (LIF) of natural fluorophores is an elegant method developed for the detection of tumors, dermal lesions and atherosclerosis. We have studied LIF as a potential diagnostic technique for analysis of valvular tissue. Using excimer laser excitation, we examined natural fluorescence recorded from porcine aortic, mitral and pulmonary valves. All three valve outflow surface tissue layers are less fluorescent at 390–450 nm than the inflow layers. Immunohistochemical analysis of collagen I and elastin content in inflow and outflow surface layers of all three valves correlated well with LIF intensities and dI/dΛ values at selected wavelengths. In conclusion, the differences observed in emitted LIF from valve surface layers are found to correlate well with diversity in the structural protein content. The LIF spectroscopic measurements may provide an appropriate tool for examination of tissue valve structure prior to use for implantation.