The Centre has a long history of developing new techniques for medical imaging (particularly in magnetic resonance imaging), transforming them from a primarily diagnostic modality into an interventional and therapeutic platform. This is facilitated by the Centre's strong engineering background in practical imaging and image analysis platform development, as well as advances in minimal access and robotic assisted surgery. Hamlyn has a strong tradition in pursuing basic sciences and theoretical research, with a clear focus on clinical translation.

In response to the current paradigm shift and clinical demand in bringing cellular and molecular imaging modalities to an in vivo – in situ setting during surgical intervention, our recent research has also been focussed on novel biophotonics platforms that can be used for real-time tissue characterisation, functional assessment, and intraoperative guidance during minimally invasive surgery. This includes, for example, SMART confocal laser endomicroscopy, time-resolved fluorescence spectroscopy and flexible FLIM catheters.


Citation

BibTex format

@inproceedings{Huang:2020,
author = {Huang, B and Tsai, Y-Y and Cartucho, J and Tuch, D and Giannarou, S and Elson, D},
title = {Tracking and Visualization of the Sensing Area for a Tethered Laparoscopic Gamma Probe},
year = {2020}
}

RIS format (EndNote, RefMan)

TY  - CPAPER
AU - Huang,B
AU - Tsai,Y-Y
AU - Cartucho,J
AU - Tuch,D
AU - Giannarou,S
AU - Elson,D
PY - 2020///
TI - Tracking and Visualization of the Sensing Area for a Tethered Laparoscopic Gamma Probe
ER -