Behind The Lens:
An Interview with Lennart Nilsson
NOVA: Tell me about the first time you used an endoscope [an instrument used
to visualize the interior of a body cavity or a hollow organ].
LN: In the spring of '65, Life Magazine published a story about human reproduction
-- a cover and sixteen pages. I worked for twelve years on this story. One
of the pictures was the face of an embryo inside the uterus taken with an endoscope
with an electronic flash. And I remember that the editors wanted to have a
witness to say that this was really the case, because it was a very sharp picture
of the just the face, the head of the fetus inside the womb. But this was not
my very first endoscopic picture. The very first, we took it in 1957 -- but
in that case I didn't get the face. I just got the legs, hands, feet, sex organs
and so on. But I was trying to get just the face. And I remember we did have
very special lighting with a strobe at the front of the endoscope -- it was
an American endoscope. And when I saw the fetus, I remember it was a fetus
about 15 weeks old -- sucking the thumb -- and when I tried to press the button
of the camera, the flash strobe didn't work. There was something wrong with
it! It took many years before I got the next chance. NOVA: It sounds like endoscopes
have come a long way...
LN: Oh, yes. There has been a revolution by a German optical company called
Storz. They have made an endoscope with a diameter of 0.6 millimeters and one
that is 0.8 millimeters. So now we can check the human embryo in a very smooth
and very nice way.
NOVA: Do you go through the cervix?
LN: No, not the cervix. We make a kind of laparoscopy through the uterine
wall. You know when the doctors are checking the genes with amniocentesis?
We have done a few cases here in Sweden and in Europe during amniocentesis.
And there we had the opportunity to take wonderful pictures of the fetuses.
NOVA: Does the endoscope follow the head of the needle?
LN: Yes, more or less right, but we sometimes have them very very close together.
This is a wide angle endoscope -- about 100 degrees -- a new way which gives
an extremely sharp image. This is what I call a revolution in endoscopy.
NOVA: What has been the technological breakthrough that has made these tiny
devices possible?
LN: There is a new way with very very tiny fiber optics, which give an enormous
high resolution. There are many many thousand fibers, very very close together
with a very small diameter.
NOVA: What about the lens?
LN: The lens is extremely tiny. I think the diameter
of the lens is 0.5 millimeters and it gives enormous high quality. And we
are using the Betacam (video) recorder
to get the very very best image. About two months ago, at the Women's Clinic
in Göteborg, we did a very fantastic sequence with the 0.8 endoscope and
there was panning and tilting. It was fantastic to see the heart beating and
the fetus was moving and it was extremely sharp and the depth of field was
unbelievable!
NOVA: You've been very involved in the development of the equipment you use,
haven't you?
LN: Always, always. I have a direct connection with the inventors both in
Germany and in Japan. So we are working together, I am often going over to
Tokyo for discussions. And even to Germany to the Storz optic company -- we
have been working together more than 25 years. If I have an idea, let's say,
to make a new kind of endoscope with an extremely small diameter, I go to them
and I discuss it with their engineers, with the inventors, the optical experts.
And then later they send me some drawings, then I go back again and then they
start to do the work. You know it's very very hard to do lenses that are a
third of a millimeter. But I have just ordered an extremely small tiny endoscope.
The diameter will be about a fifth of a millimeter and even smaller, because
I'm going to do new kinds of pictures -- especially with embryos.
NOVA: What do you do for light inside the womb?
LN: We put in a light with the fibers all the time. And
sometimes we put in another light from the side too, when we have space.
But the piece I just worked
on in Göteborg was unbelievable. The fetus was moving, not really sucking
its thumb, but it was moving and you could see everything -- heartbeats and
umbilical cord and so on. It was extremely beautiful, really beautiful! And
I did some panning ... I was extremely satisfied with the 0.8. So this is a
new way.
NOVA: The mother must have loved seeing her unborn child in such detail.
LN: Oh yes! She was absolutely proud, happy, happy. It was like a portrait!
NOVA: Of course, many of your photographs are taken outside the body. Where
do you get these fetuses?
LN: For the animals, they came from the University in
Uppsala and all different kinds of clinics here. The chickens came from the
University of Uppsala and
the human embryos came from women's clinics in Stockholm and in Göteborg
and so on. And from Germany, we have gotten some material from a pig.
NOVA: Tell me a little about working with a scanning electron microscope --
how do you prepare a specimen?
LN: You know, of course, the specimens are not alive. We have to fix them
in a fixing liquid formaldehyde and then we have to do a rinsing and then we
have to coat them in a thin layer of gold. We sometimes freeze the specimen
with liquid nitrogen, which is extremely cold, you know. This is another technique
we use now -- but the specimens are not alive. But there is a new kind of low
voltage scanning electron microscope that allows us to take ciliated cells
alive. This is a new way.
NOVA: I understand that one of the rooms in your lab is kept at body temperature.
Is this the room you use for photographing these live cells?
LN: Yes. This is the thermo-room. There I can follow a living cell for a whole
week. In this room I have a microscope and special chambers with liquids. We
have a monitor outside the room where we can check the image, because we take
one frame every minute (or sometimes two or three frames per minute) and, my
assistant and I, we can check the focusing -- and we can focus on our side
too, because we never enter the thermo-room during our work, because of the
vibration. So we do everything remotely. This is something very important for
looking at white blood cells, bacteria and so on.
NOVA: It sounds challenging...
LN: Yes. This is something that is extremely, extremely difficult. And my
real enemy is not to hold the specimen sterile, but it's the lighting. The
light is our real enemy. So we have to work with very very poor lighting. But
we can increase the light with computers. That's the new way -- with computers,
computers, computers. That's the way we can have the cell survive and get some
new information in high resolution. We started about five years ago and, today,
I think we have reached the target. We can even look at viruses. I have seen
viruses with a light microscope. They are very very tiny, but I have seen them.
NOVA: Your photographs always seem to reveal the most miraculous things. I'm
curious if you've ever been disappointed by something you've revealed.
LN: Oh yes, very very very often. It's often that something bad happens during
the filming -- egg cells are dying inside the woman, the fertilized egg cell
is not going to get fertilized inside the body. And for example, the implantation
-- only 40% of all fertilized cells are going to get implanted inside the body.
Of course it's much harder in vitro, outside the body, to do the same. So,
of course, many times we are disappointed.
NOVA: How did you feel when you saw the HIV virus? Was it an emotional experience?
LN: Oh, yes. Absolutely. I remember it was maybe ten
years ago. I got a specimen in Stockholm and then I went over to Paris to
prepare look at it with Dr. Luc
Montagnier at the Pasteur Institute in Paris. He was the very first to discover
the AIDS virus. So we have had a very good collaboration. When I saw the first
image, I was really shaken. I saw something extremely sharp, because I had
a new high resolution scanning electron microscope from Japan -- the resolution
was unbelievable -- 5 or 6 ångstroms. So when I saw it, and just the
sharpness of it, I thought, "this is something very remarkable." And
when I pressed the button to take the pictures, I felt something very unusual,
because this was a great killer in the world -- and is still a great killer
in the world.
NOVA: Is it true that you wanted to attend medical school just for the knowledge?
LN: Yes, you know, I decided, I think it was '58, to
go to the Karolinska Institute -- in the medical school here. And I had decided
it, me and my family.
And then professor Axel Ingelman-Sundberg, who was the first author of the
first edition of A Child Is Born, said, "Lennart, don't lose five years." Why?
I was really angry. I have many times thought I did the wrong thing, but the
reason was not to be a medical doctor -- it was just to have the information.
But then, maybe I was wrong, I don't know. Of course, today at the Karolinska
Institute, I am working with some top experts -- even some Nobel prize winners.
They have the latest news and I have the technique.
NOVA: Can you tell me what you're working on now?
LN: I am trying to get some images of viruses, because
there is a scientist in Göteborg here in Sweden -- and there are some
relatives of the AIDS virus. So this is what we are working with now. And
then I have decided to
make a new addition of the book, A Child Is Born. And then we are going to
start a new television film about the miracle of love -- the chemistry of love.
Everything before the kiss. (laughs) The chemistry of love is something which
is extremely extremely unbelievable. This is something we have planned for
more than two years, so I hope that we are going to start in the beginning
of next year. [Ed. note: Watch for the Miracle of Love on NOVA.]
NOVA: Are you still looking at the moon and the planets?
LN: Yes, sometimes in the country. I have an idea to try to photograph the
stars and the sky in a new way with a telescope -- to make them more familiar.
I have an idea -- I have already taken some still pictures of it. So, maybe
we can do something in the future, but you know, I have to do one thing and
concentrate on it. But this is a dream I have.
NOVA: What do you find most exciting about your work?
LN: It's to surprise people about something that is extremely well known.
I mean human reproduction, the human body, nature and so on. To surprise them
with a new technique. Like a journalist! Like you! I am not a writer, but I
am a writer with my cameras. But I don't like to talk big about anything. I
have some friends, colleagues here at the Karolinska Institute and even in
the United States and many other countries too, because we are working together
as scientists. I have the instruments, ideas, technology, computer techniques.
We try to create or see something, which has not been known before -- just
to discover something together. This is always my dream.
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