2013, Vol.16, No.1, pp.1-12
Photodynamic Therapy (PDT) is a photo-optical treatment technique intended for malignant biological tissue destruction. An inoculated photosensitizer is optically irradiated and tumoral tissue is destroyed with great specificity, practically absent secondary effects and good aesthetic result. PDT is inefficient in thick tumoral tissues due mainly to the optical radiation and photosensitizer spatial distributions, and also to lesion-independent clinical protocols. In this work we analyse the use of different nanoparticles in PDT. Optical propagation, photosensitizer non-homogeneous spatial distribution and photochemical reactions are taken into account. A complex predictive model is used to estimate the treatment outcome and the influence of nanoparticles.
Key words:
nanoparticle, photosensitizer, photochemical interaction
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