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Near-infrared optical tomography: endoscopic imaging approach
Author(s) -
Daqing Piao,
Hao Xie,
Cameron Musgrove,
Charles F. Bunting,
Weili Zhang,
Guolong Zhang,
Ellen B. Domnick-Davidsion,
Kenneth E. Bartels,
G. Reed Holyoak,
Sreenivas Vemulapalli,
Hamid Dehghani,
Brian W. Pogue
Publication year - 2007
Publication title -
proceedings of spie, the international society for optical engineering/proceedings of spie
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Conference proceedings
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.192
H-Index - 176
eISSN - 1996-756X
pISSN - 0277-786X
DOI - 10.1117/12.695217
Subject(s) - tomography , optical tomography , detector , diffuse optical imaging , tomographic reconstruction , optics , optical fiber , iterative reconstruction , near infrared spectroscopy , materials science , biomedical engineering , computer science , physics , computer vision , medicine
Near-infrared optical tomography is an interesting technique of imaging with high blood-based contrast. Unfortunately non-invasive NIR tomographic imaging has been restricted to specific organs like breast that can be transilluminated externally. In this paper, we demonstrate that near-infrared (NIR) optical tomography can be employed at the endoscope- scale, and implemented at a rapid sampling speed that allows translation to in vivo use. A spread-spectral-encoding technique based on a broadband light source is combined with light delivery by linear-to-circular fiber bundle, to provide endoscopic probing of multiple source/detector fibers for tomographic imaging as well as parallel sampling of all source- detector pairs for rapid data acquisition. Endoscopic NIR tomography is demonstrated by use of a 12mm diameter probe housing 8 sources and 8 detectors at 8 Hz frame rate. Transrectal NIR optical tomography by use of tissue specimen is also presented. This novel approach provides the key feasibility studies to allow this blood-based contrast imaging technology to be tried in cancer detection of internal organs via endoscopic interrogation.

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