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Quantitative phase‐filtered wavelength‐modulated differential photoacoustic radar tumor hypoxia imaging toward early cancer detection
Author(s) -
Dovlo Edem,
Lashkari Bahman,
Sean Choi Sung,
Mandelis Andreas,
Shi Wei,
Liu FeiFei
Publication year - 2017
Publication title -
journal of biophotonics
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.877
H-Index - 66
eISSN - 1864-0648
pISSN - 1864-063X
DOI - 10.1002/jbio.201600168
Subject(s) - materials science , wavelength , multispectral image , laser , optics , biomedical engineering , chemistry , optoelectronics , medicine , physics , computer science , computer vision
Overcoming the limitations of conventional linear spectroscopy used in multispectral photoacoustic imaging, wherein a linear relationship is assumed between the absorbed optical energy and the absorption spectra of the chromophore at a specific location, is crucial for obtaining accurate spatially‐resolved quantitative functional information by exploiting known chromophore‐specific spectral characteristics. This study introduces a non‐invasive phase‐filtered differential photoacoustic technique, wavelength‐modulated differential photoacoustic radar (WM‐DPAR) imaging that addresses this issue by eliminating the effect of the unknown wavelength‐dependent fluence. It employs two laser wavelengths modulated out‐of‐phase to significantly suppress background absorption while amplifying the difference between the two photoacoustic signals. This facilitates pre‐malignant tumor identification and hypoxia monitoring, as minute changes in total hemoglobin concentration and hemoglobin oxygenation are detectable. The system can be tuned for specific applications such as cancer screening and SO 2 quantification by regulating the amplitude ratio and phase shift of the signal. The WM‐DPAR imaging of a head and neck carcinoma tumor grown in the thigh of a nude rat demonstrates the functional PA imaging of small animals in vivo . The PA appearance of the tumor in relation to tumor vascularity is investigated by immunohistochemistry. Phase‐filtered WM‐DPAR imaging is also illustrated, maximizing quantitative SO 2 imaging fidelity of tissues.Oxygenation levels within a tumor grown in the thigh of a nude rat using the two‐wavelength phase‐filtered differential PAR method.