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      Improved contrast in inverted selective plane illumination microscopy of thick tissues using confocal detection and structured illumination.

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          Abstract

          Inverted selective plane illumination microscopy (iSPIM) enables fast, large field-of-view, long term imaging with compatibility with conventional sample mounting. However, the imaging quality can be deteriorated in thick tissues due to sample scattering. Three strategies have been adopted in this paper to optimize the imaging performance of iSPIM on thick tissue imaging: electronic confocal slit detection (eCSD), structured illumination (SI) and the two combined. We compared the image contrast when using SPIM, confocal SPIM (using eCSD alone), SI SPIM (using SI alone) or confocal-SI SPIM (combining both methods) on images of gelatin phantom and highly-scattering fluorescently-stained human tissue. We demonstrate that all the three methods showed remarkable contrast enhancement on both samples compared to iSPIM alone, and SI SPIM and the combined confocal-SI mode outperformed confocal SPIM in contrast enhancement. Moreover, the use of SI at high pattern frequencies outperformed confocal SPIM in terms of optical sectioning capability. However, image signal-to-noise ratio (SNR) was decreased at high pattern frequencies when imaging scattering samples with SI SPIM. By combining eCSD with SI to reduce background signal and noise, the superior optical sectioning performance of SI could be achieved while also maintaining high image SNR.

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          Author and article information

          Journal
          Biomed Opt Express
          Biomedical optics express
          Optica Publishing Group
          2156-7085
          2156-7085
          Dec 01 2017
          : 8
          : 12
          Affiliations
          [1 ] Department of Biomedical Engineering, Tulane University, 500 Lindy Boggs Center, New Orleans, LA 70118, USA.
          Article
          305705
          10.1364/BOE.8.005546
          5745102
          29296487
          0eec5a1c-d3f7-4a4b-9223-68c82f706ba1
          History

          (110.0113) Imaging through turbid media,(170.2520) Fluorescence microscopy,(170.3880) Medical and biological imaging,(170.5810) Scanning microscopy

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