
Single-shot two-dimensional spectroscopic magnetomotive optical coherence elastography with graphics processing unit acceleration
Author(s) -
PinChieh Huang,
Rishyashring R. Iyer,
Yuan-Zhi Liu,
Stephen A. Boppart
Publication year - 2020
Publication title -
optics letters/optics index
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.524
H-Index - 272
eISSN - 1071-2763
pISSN - 0146-9592
DOI - 10.1364/ol.397900
Subject(s) - elastography , data acquisition , frame rate , optical coherence tomography , optics , graphics processing unit , materials science , image resolution , computer science , coherence (philosophical gambling strategy) , medical imaging , physics , artificial intelligence , acoustics , quantum mechanics , ultrasound , operating system
Biomechanical contrast within tissues can be assessed based on the resonant frequency probed by spectroscopic magnetomotive optical coherence elastography (MM-OCE). However, to date, in vivo MM-OCE imaging has not been achieved, mainly due to the constraints on imaging speed. Previously, spatially-resolved spectroscopic contrast was achieved in a "multiple-excitation, multiple-acquisition" manner, where seconds of coil cooling time set between consecutive imaging frames lead to total acquisition times of tens of minutes. Here, we demonstrate an improved data acquisition speed by providing a single chirped force excitation prior to magnetomotion imaging with a BM-scan configuration. In addition, elastogram reconstruction was accelerated by exploiting the parallel computing capability of a graphics processing unit (GPU). The accelerated MM-OCE platform achieved data acquisition in 2.9 s and post-processing in 0.6 s for a 2048-frame BM-mode stack. In addition, the elasticity sensing functionality was validated on tissue-mimicking phantoms with high spatial resolution. For the first time, to the best of our knowledge, MM-OCE images were acquired from the skin of a living mouse, demonstrating its feasibility for in vivo imaging.