DocumentCode :
1928837
Title :
Photoacoustic tomography: Ultrasonically breaking through the optical diffusion and diffraction limits
Author :
Wang, L.V. ; Beare, Gene K.
Author_Institution :
Dept. of Biomed. Eng., Washington Univ. in St. Louis, St. Louis, MO, USA
fYear :
2013
fDate :
12-16 May 2013
Firstpage :
1
Lastpage :
1
Abstract :
We develop photoacoustic imaging technologies for in vivo early-cancer detection and functional, metabolic, molecular, and histologic imaging by physically combining non-ionizing electromagnetic and ultrasonic waves. Unlike ionizing x-ray radiation, non-ionizing electromagnetic waves - such as optical and radio waves - pose no health hazard and reveal new contrast mechanisms. Unfortunately, electromagnetic waves in the non-ionizing spectral region do not penetrate biological tissue in straight paths as x-rays do. Consequently, high-resolution tomography based on non-ionizing electromagnetic waves alone - such as confocal microscopy, two-photon microscopy, and optical coherence tomography - is limited to superficial imaging within approximately one optical transport mean free path (~1 mm in the skin) of the surface of scattering tissue. Ultrasonic imaging, on the contrary, provides good image resolution but suffers strong speckle artifacts as well as poor contrast in early-stage tumors. Ultrasound-mediated imaging modalities that combine electromagnetic and ultrasonic waves can synergistically overcome the above limitations. The hybrid modalities provide relatively deep penetration at high ultrasonic resolution and yield speckle-free images with high electromagnetic contrast.
Keywords :
biomedical optical imaging; biomedical ultrasonics; cancer; image resolution; medical image processing; optical microscopy; optical tomography; photoacoustic effect; skin; tumours; ultrasonic imaging; biological tissue; confocal microscopy; deep penetration; diffraction limits; early-stage tumors; electromagnetic contrast; functional imaging; high ultrasonic resolution; high-resolution tomography; histologic imaging; image resolution; in vivo early-cancer detection; ionizing X-ray radiation; metabolic imaging; molecular imaging; nonionizing spectral region; optical coherence tomography; optical diffusion; optical transport mean free path; optical waves; photoacoustic imaging; photoacoustic tomography; physically combining nonionizing electromagnetic waves; radio waves; scattering tissue; skin; speckle artifacts; speckle-free images; superficial imaging; two-photon microscopy; ultrasonic imaging; ultrasonic waves; ultrasonically breaking; ultrasound-mediated imaging modalities; Adaptive optics; Biomedical optical imaging; Optical diffraction; Optical imaging; Optical saturation; Optical scattering;
fLanguage :
English
Publisher :
ieee
Conference_Titel :
Lasers and Electro-Optics Europe (CLEO EUROPE/IQEC), 2013 Conference on and International Quantum Electronics Conference
Conference_Location :
Munich
Print_ISBN :
978-1-4799-0593-5
Type :
conf
DOI :
10.1109/CLEOE-IQEC.2013.6801491
Filename :
6801491
Link To Document :
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