4.6 Review

Intraoperative Guidance Using Hyperspectral Imaging: A Review for Surgeons

Journal

DIAGNOSTICS
Volume 11, Issue 11, Pages -

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/diagnostics11112066

Keywords

hyperspectral imaging; optical imaging; image-guided surgery; intraoperative guidance; intraoperative imaging; precision surgery

Funding

  1. ARC Foundation for Cancer Research (9 Rue Guy Mpquet, 94803 Villejuif, France) through ELIOS grant

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Hyperspectral imaging (HSI) is a novel optical imaging modality that allows for contactless and non-destructive biochemical analysis of living tissue at a molecular level. It has diverse applications in the medical field and provides quantitative and qualitative information to objectively discriminate between different tissue types and between healthy and pathological tissue. Despite its potential, HSI is still not widely used in daily surgical practice, but has recently been utilized as an intraoperative guidance tool within different surgical disciplines.
Hyperspectral imaging (HSI) is a novel optical imaging modality, which has recently found diverse applications in the medical field. HSI is a hybrid imaging modality, combining a digital photographic camera with a spectrographic unit, and it allows for a contactless and non-destructive biochemical analysis of living tissue. HSI provides quantitative and qualitative information of the tissue composition at molecular level in a contrast-free manner, hence making it possible to objectively discriminate between different tissue types and between healthy and pathological tissue. Over the last two decades, HSI has been increasingly used in the medical field, and only recently it has found an application in the operating room. In the last few years, several research groups have used this imaging modality as an intraoperative guidance tool within different surgical disciplines. Despite its great potential, HSI still remains far from being routinely used in the daily surgical practice, since it is still largely unknown to most of the surgical community. The aim of this study is to provide clinical surgeons with an overview of the capabilities, current limitations, and future directions of HSI for intraoperative guidance.

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