FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
ACS News Service Weekly PressPac: October 19, 2011
New tool to help surgeons remove more cancer tissue during brain surgery
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Analytical Chemistry
Scientists are reporting development and successful initial testing of a new tool that tells whether brain tissue is normal or cancerous while an operation is underway, so that surgeons can remove more of the tumor without removing healthy tissue, improving patients鈥� survival. The report appears in ACS鈥� journal Analytical Chemistry.
Zolt脕n Tak脕ts and colleagues point out that cancer can recur if tumor cells remain in the body after surgery. As a precaution, surgeons typically remove extra tissue surrounding a breast, prostate and other tumors in the body. But neurosurgeons face severe limitations because removing extra tissue can impair the patient鈥檚 memory, mobility and other vital functions. Neurosurgeons thus strive to precisely identify the tumor margins during brain surgery. Current methods take too long and are unreliable. To overcome these challenges, the researchers developed a new tool that can identify the margin between cancerous and healthy tissue in half the time previously needed.
They describe linking a mainstay surgical tool termed an ultrasonic aspirator 鈥� used to break up and suction tissue 鈥� to a modified version of a standard laboratory tool called a mass spectrometer. Their tests proved successful on human brain samples. 鈥淏esides brain surgery, the method has application potential in the field of the surgery of organs including liver, pancreas or kidney,鈥� say the researchers.

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