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High-Throughput Screening of Large Volumes of Whole Blood Using Structured Illumination and Fluorescent On-Chip Imaging

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Date

2012

Journal Title

Journal ISSN

Volume Title

Publisher

Royal Soc Chemistry

Open Access Color

BRONZE

Green Open Access

Yes

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Publicly Funded

No
Impulse
Top 10%
Influence
Top 10%
Popularity
Top 10%

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Abstract

Undiluted blood samples are difficult to image in large volumes since blood constitutes a highly absorbing and scattering medium. As a result of this limitation, optical imaging of rare cells (e.g., circulating tumour cells) within unprocessed whole blood remains a challenge, demanding the use of special microfluidic technologies. Here we demonstrate a new fluorescent on-chip imaging modality that can rapidly screen large volumes of absorbing and scattering media, such as undiluted whole blood samples, for detection of fluorescent micro-objects at low concentrations (for example <= 50-100 particles/mL). In this high-throughput imaging modality, a large area microfluidic device (e.g., 7-18 cm(2)), which contains for example similar to 0.3-0.7 mL of undiluted whole blood sample, is directly positioned onto a wide-field opto-electronic sensor-array such that the fluorescent emission within the microchannel can be detected without the use of any imaging lenses. This microfluidic device is then illuminated and laterally scanned with an array of Gaussian excitation spots, which is generated through a spatial light modulator. For each scanning position of this excitation array, a lensfree fluorescent image of the blood sample is captured using the opto-electronic sensor-array, resulting in a sequence of images (e.g., 144 lensfree frames captured in similar to 36 s) for the same sample chip. Digitally merging these lensfree fluorescent images based on a maximum intensity projection (MIP) algorithm enabled us to significantly boost the signal-to-noise ratio (SNR) and contrast of the fluorescent micro-objects within whole blood, which normally remain undetected (i.e., hidden) using conventional uniform excitation schemes, involving plane wave illumination. This high-throughput on-chip imaging platform based on structured excitation could be useful for rare cell research by enabling rapid screening of large volume microfluidic devices that process whole blood and other optically dense media.

Description

Ozcan, Aydogan/0000-0002-0717-683X; Coskun, Ahmet/0000-0002-5797-1524

Keywords

Blood, Spectrometry, Fluorescence, Microfluidic Analytical Techniques, Fluorescent Dyes, Molecular Imaging

Fields of Science

0301 basic medicine, 0303 health sciences, 03 medical and health sciences

Citation

Arpali, Serap Altay...et al. "High-throughput screening of large volumes of whole blood using structured illumination and fluorescent on-chip imaging", Lab On A Chıp, Vol. 12, pp. 4968-4971, (2012)

WoS Q

Q1

Scopus Q

Q1
OpenCitations Logo
OpenCitations Citation Count
49

Source

Lab on a Chip

Volume

12

Issue

23

Start Page

4968

End Page

4971
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Citations

CrossRef : 45

Scopus : 49

PubMed : 18

Patent Family : 1

Captures

Mendeley Readers : 61

SCOPUS™ Citations

50

checked on Feb 24, 2026

Web of Science™ Citations

48

checked on Feb 24, 2026

Page Views

8

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