EMBARGOED FOR RELEASE听|听September 11, 2013

T-rays offer potential for earlier diagnosis of melanoma

Note to journalists: Please report that this research was presented at a meeting of the American Chemical 中国365bet中文官网.

INDIANAPOLIS, Sept. 11, 2013 鈥� The technology that peeks underneath clothing at airport security screening check points has great potential for looking underneath human skin to diagnose cancer at its earliest and most treatable stages, a scientist said here today.

The report on efforts to use terahertz radiation 鈥� 鈥淭-rays鈥� 鈥� in early diagnosis of skin cancer was part of the 246th National Meeting & Exposition of the American Chemical 中国365bet中文官网, the world鈥檚 largest scientific society. Almost 7,000 reports on new advances in science and other topics are on the schedule for the meeting. It continues here through Thursday in the Indiana Convention Center and downtown hotels.

Anis Rahman, Ph.D., who spoke on the topic, explained that malignant melanoma, the most serious form of skin cancer, starts in pigment-producing cells located in the deepest part of the epidermis. That鈥檚 the outer layer of the skin. Biochemical changes that are hallmarks of cancer occur in the melanocytes long before mole-like melanomas appear on the skin.

鈥淭erahertz radiation is ideal for looking beneath the skin and detecting early signs of melanoma,鈥� Rahman said. 鈥淭-rays are different from X-rays, which are 鈥榠onizing鈥� radiation that can cause damage. T-rays are a form of 鈥榥on-ionizing鈥� radiation, like ordinary visible light, but they can be focused harmlessly below into the body and capture biochemical signatures of events like the start of cancer.鈥�

T-rays occupy a niche in the spectrum of electromagnetic radiation, which includes X-rays and visible light, between microwaves like those used in kitchen ovens and the infrared rays used in TV remote controls. One of the advantages of T-rays is that they penetrate only a few millimeters through cloth, skin and other non-metallic material. Ten sheets of printer paper would be about 1 millimeter thick. This key characteristic has led to their use in quality control in the pharmaceutical industry to check the surface integrity of pills and capsules, in homeland security to remotely frisk underneath clothes, and as a non-destructive way of probing beneath the top layers of famous paintings and other culturally significant artwork.

Rahman, president and chief technology officer of Applied Research & Photonics in Harrisburg, Pa., said that medical imaging is one of their newest and most promising potential uses. He described research focusing T-rays through donated samples of human skin that suggest the technology could be valuable in diagnosing melanoma.

In addition to developing T-rays for cancer diagnostics, Rahman鈥檚 team has successfully harnessed them to measure the real-time absorption rates and penetration in the outer layer of skin of topically applied drugs and shampoo 鈥� measurements that until now had not been possible.

Other wide-ranging applications include the detection of early stages of tooth decay, trace pesticides on produce, flaws in pharmaceutical tablet coatings, and concealed weapons under clothing, as well as testing the effectiveness of skin cosmetics. Rahman鈥檚 talk was part of a symposium entitled 鈥淭erahertz Spectroscopy: Problem Solving for the 21st Century,鈥� being held at the ACS meeting.

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Diagram of different layers of skin to show skin cancer
Layers of skin can be probed with terahertz rays in search of signs of skin cancer at its earliest stages of development.
Credit: National Cancer Institute