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      Noncontact broadband all-optical photoacoustic microscopy based on a low-coherence interferometer

      , , ,
      Applied Physics Letters
      AIP Publishing

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          Laser optoacoustic imaging system for detection of breast cancer.

          We designed, fabricated and tested the laser optoacoustic imaging system for breast cancer detection (LOIS-64), which fuses optical and acoustic imaging techniques in one modality by utilizing pulsed optical illumination and ultrawide-band ultrasonic detection of resulting optoacoustic (OA) signals. The system was designed to image a single breast slice in craniocaudal or mediolateral projection with an arc-shaped array of 64 ultrawide-band acoustic transducers. The system resolution on breast phantoms was at least 0.5 mm. The single-channel sensitivity of 1.66 mVPa was estimated to be sufficient for single-pulse imaging of 6 to 11 mm tumors through the whole imaging slice of the breast. The implemented signal processing using the wavelet transform allowed significant reduction of the low-frequency (LF) acoustic noise, allowed localization of the optoacoustic signals from tumors, and enhanced the contrast and sharpened the boundaries of the optoacoustic images of the tumors. During the preliminary clinical studies on 27 patients, the LOIS-64 was able to visualize 18 out of 20 malignant lesions suspected from mammography and ultrasound images and confirmed by the biopsy performed after the optoacoustic tomography (OAT) procedure.
            • Record: found
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            Imaging of hemoglobin oxygen saturation variations in single vesselsin vivousing photoacoustic microscopy

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              Photoacoustic tomography using a Mach-Zehnder interferometer as an acoustic line detector.

              A three-dimensional photoacoustic imaging method is presented that uses a Mach-Zehnder interferometer for measurement of acoustic waves generated in an object by irradiation with short laser pulses. The signals acquired with the interferometer correspond to line integrals over the acoustic wave field. An algorithm for reconstruction of a three-dimensional image from such signals measured at multiple positions around the object is shown that is a combination of a frequency-domain technique and the inverse Radon transform. From images of a small source scanning across the interferometer beam it is estimated that the spatial resolution of the imaging system is in the range of 100 to about 300 mum, depending on the interferometer beam width and the size of the aperture formed by the scan length divided by the source-detector distance. By taking an image of a phantom it could be shown that the imaging system in its present configuration is capable of producing three-dimensional images of objects with an overall size in the range of several millimeters to centimeters. Strategies are proposed how the technique can be scaled for imaging of smaller objects with higher resolution.

                Author and article information

                Journal
                Applied Physics Letters
                Appl. Phys. Lett.
                AIP Publishing
                0003-6951
                1077-3118
                January 26 2015
                January 26 2015
                : 106
                : 4
                : 043701
                Article
                10.1063/1.4906748
                c29972fd-8ade-4cd0-83a6-909e98e30dd8
                © 2015
                History

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