Indocyanine Green
Cross-source consensus on Indocyanine Green from 1 sources and 5 claims.
1 sources · 5 claims
Uses
How it works
Evidence quality
Highlighted claims
- ICG is a fluorescent molecule used in image-guided surgery. — Indocyanine green fluorescence for intraoperative detection of liver tumours in minimally invasive surgery: protocol for the LIVERGREEN phase IV multicentre clinical trial
- ICG accumulates in hepatocellular carcinoma tissue and peritumoural areas of adenocarcinomas. — Indocyanine green fluorescence for intraoperative detection of liver tumours in minimally invasive surgery: protocol for the LIVERGREEN phase IV multicentre clinical trial
- ICG emits fluorescence under near-infrared light at 830 nm, helping surgeons identify suspicious liver tissue. — Indocyanine green fluorescence for intraoperative detection of liver tumours in minimally invasive surgery: protocol for the LIVERGREEN phase IV multicentre clinical trial
- ICG-only lesions should be resected only when other evidence also supports tumour presence. — Indocyanine green fluorescence for intraoperative detection of liver tumours in minimally invasive surgery: protocol for the LIVERGREEN phase IV multicentre clinical trial
- The clinical importance of lesions detected only by ICG fluorescence remains uncertain. — Indocyanine green fluorescence for intraoperative detection of liver tumours in minimally invasive surgery: protocol for the LIVERGREEN phase IV multicentre clinical trial