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- Record
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- Author
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Rice, B W; Cable, M D; Nelson, M B - Title
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- Type
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Journal Article - Year
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2001 - Publication
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Journal of biomedical optics - Products
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- Volume
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6 - Issue
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4 - Page Numbers
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N/A - Research Area : N/A
- Keywords
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Animals; Bioware; Diagnostic Imaging; Fluorescent Dyes; Green Fluorescent Proteins; Luciferases; Luminescent Measurements; Luminescent Proteins; Mice; Mice, Inbred BALB C; Neoplasms; PC-3M-luc; Pneumonia - Abstract
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In vivo imaging of cells tagged with light-emitting probes, such as firefly luciferase or fluorescent proteins, is a powerful technology that enables a wide range of biological studies in small research animals. Reporters with emission in the red to infrared (>600 nm) are preferred due to the low absorption in tissue at these wavelengths. Modeling of photon diffusion through tissue indicates that bioluminescent cell counts as low as a few hundred can be detected subcutaneously, while approximately 10(6) cells are required to detect signals at approximately 2 cm depth in tissue. Signal-to-noise estimates show that cooled back-thinned integrating charge coupled devices (CCDs) are preferred to image-intensified CCDs for this application, mainly due to their high quantum efficiency (approximately 85%) at wavelengths >600 nm where tissue absorption is low. Instrumentation for in vivo imaging developed at Xenogen is described and several examples of images of mice with bioluminescent cells are presented. - URL
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http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/11728202 - Call Number
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PKI @ catherine.lautenschlager @ - Serial
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8984
- Author