Resumen
Pharmaceutical oral dosage forms are used in this paper to test the sensitivity and spatial resolution of hyperspectral imaging instruments. The first experiment tested the hypothesis that a near-infrared (IR) tunable diode-based remote sensing system is capable of monitoring degradation of hard gelatin capsules at a relatively long distance (0.5 km). Spectra from the capsules were used to differentiate among capsules exposed to an atmosphere containing 150 ppb formaldehyde for 0, 2, 4, and 8 h. Robust median-based principal component regression with Bayesian inference was employed for outlier detection. The second experiment tested the hypothesis that near-IR imaging spectrometry of tablets permits the identification and composition of multiple individual tablets to be determined simultaneously. A near-IR camera was used to collect thousands of spectra simultaneously from a field of blister-packaged tablets. The number of tablets that a typical near-IR camera can currently analyze simultaneously was estimated to be approximately 1300. The bootstrap error-adjusted single-sample technique chemometric-imaging algorithm was used to draw probability-density contour plots that revealed tablet composition. The single-capsule analysis provides an indication of how far apart the sample and instrumentation can be and still maintain adequate signal-to-noise ratio (S/N), while the multiple-tablet imaging experiment gives an indication of how many samples can be analyzed simultaneously while maintaining an adequate S/N and pixel coverage on each sample.
| Idioma original | English |
|---|---|
| Páginas (desde-hasta) | 561-570 |
| Número de páginas | 10 |
| Publicación | Journal of Biomedical Optics |
| Volumen | 7 |
| N.º | 4 |
| DOI | |
| Estado | Published - oct 2002 |
Nota bibliográfica
Funding Information:The authors acknowledge the support of the National Science Foundation through CHE-9257998 and DGE-9870691. A preliminary report on this work was published in the Proc. SPIE Symp. BiOS., 2002.
Financiación
The authors acknowledge the support of the National Science Foundation through CHE-9257998 and DGE-9870691. A preliminary report on this work was published in the Proc. SPIE Symp. BiOS., 2002.
| Financiadores | Número del financiador |
|---|---|
| National Science Foundation (NSF) | CHE-9257998, DGE-9870691 |
ASJC Scopus subject areas
- Electronic, Optical and Magnetic Materials
- Atomic and Molecular Physics, and Optics
- Biomaterials
- Biomedical Engineering