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Details

  • Name

    Maria Rosário Pinheiro
  • Role

    Research Assistant
  • Since

    01st January 2023
001
Publications

2026

Assessment of Tartrazine Diffusion Properties in Skeletal Muscle

Authors
Guerra, AR; Oliveira, LR; Rodrigues, GO; Pinheiro, MR; Carvalho, MI; Tuchín, VV; Oliveira, LM;

Publication
IEEE JOURNAL OF SELECTED TOPICS IN QUANTUM ELECTRONICS

Abstract
Evaluating diffusion properties of novel optical clearing (OC) agents is critical for advancing medical imaging. Tartrazine (TTZ), a strong absorbing dye, has shown promise in enhancing tissue transparency, yet its diffusion properties remain uncharacterized. In this work, OC treatments with TTZ-water solutions with varying osmolarities were performed, and the diffusion times (tau) that characterize the tissue dehydration and the RI matching mechanisms were estimated. From kinetic T-c measurements during treatment, tau values of water and TTZ were estimated in muscles as 60.0 s and 416.0 s, respectively. Corresponding diffusion coefficients (D) were derived from sample thickness data measured during treatments where the unique fluxes of TTZ and water occur. The respective D values were then calculated as 1.9 x 10(-6) cm(2)/s for water and 3.6 x 10(-7) cm(2)/s for TTZ. These findings provide key insights into TTZ diffusion in skeletal muscle and support its potential as an effective OC agent.

2025

Tartrazine for Optical Clearing of Tissues: Stability and Diffusion Issues

Authors
Guerra, AR; Oliveira, LR; Rodrigues, GO; Pinheiro, MR; Carvalho, MI; Tuchin, VV; Oliveira, LM;

Publication
JOURNAL OF BIOPHOTONICS

Abstract
Measuring the density of tartrazine (TZ) powder allowed to develop a protocol for fast preparation of aqueous solutions with a desired concentration. The stability time of these solutions decreases exponentially with the increase of TZ concentration: solutions with TZ concentrations below 25% remain stable for more than 24 h, while the solution with 60% TZ remains stable only for 35 min. To validate the developed protocol, muscle samples were immersed in the 40% TZ solution and, as expected, the tissue transparency increased smoothly and exponentially during the whole treatment of 30 min. The diffusion time of TZ in ex vivo skeletal muscle was quantitatively determined with high accuracy as tau TZ = 5.39 +/- 0.49 min for sample thickness of 0.5 mm. By measuring the refractive index of TZ solutions during preparation, it will be easier to prepare such solutions in a fast manner for future research on tissue optical clearing.

2024

Determination of the spectral dispersion for the heart muscle - A Kramers-Kronig approach

Authors
Oliveira L.M.; Pinheiro M.R.; Oliveira H.P.; Carvalho M.I.; Tuchin V.V.;

Publication
2024 International Conference Laser Optics Iclo 2024 Proceedings

Abstract
The refractive index of the pigs heart was measured at wavelengths between 255 and 850 nm to calculate the dispersion. The total transmittance and total reflectance spectra of the pig heart were measured between 200 and 1000 nm to calculate the spectral absorption coefficient. Using Kramers-Kronig relations, the dispersion of the heart was matched to experimental refractive index values.

2024

Precise Identification of Different Cervical Intraepithelial Neoplasia (CIN) Stages, Using Biomedical Engineering Combined with Data Mining and Machine Learning

Authors
Kruczkowski, M; Drabik-Kruczkowska, A; Wesolowski, R; Kloska, A; Pinheiro, MR; Fernandes, L; Galan, SG;

Publication
Interdisciplinary Cancer Research

Abstract

2024

Tutorial on the Use of the Photon Diffusion Approximation for Fast Calculation of Tissue Optical Properties

Authors
Pinheiro, MR; Carvalho, MI; Oliveira, LM;

Publication
JOURNAL OF BIOPHOTONICS

Abstract
Computer simulations, which are performed at a single wavelength at a time, have been traditionally used to estimate the optical properties of tissues. The results of these simulations need to be interpolated. For a broadband estimation of tissue optical properties, the use of computer simulations becomes time consuming and computer demanding. When spectral measurements are available for a tissue, the use of the photon diffusion approximation can be done to perform simple and direct calculations to obtain the broadband spectra of some optical properties. The additional estimation of the reduced scattering coefficient at a small number of discrete wavelengths allows to perform further calculations to obtain the spectra of other optical properties. This study used spectral measurements from the heart muscle to explain the calculation pipeline to obtain a complete set of the spectral optical properties and to show its versatility for use with other tissues for various biophotonics applications.