Thermo-elastic optical coherence microscopy

Conference Paper (2020)
Author(s)

Aaron Doug Deen (Erasmus MC)

Tom Pfeiffer (University of Lübeck)

Heleen Van Beusekom (Erasmus MC)

Jeroen Essers (Erasmus MC)

Robert Huber (University of Lübeck)

Antonius F.W. Van Der Steen (Chinese Academy of Sciences, Erasmus MC, TU Delft - ImPhys/Medical Imaging)

Gijs Van Soest (Erasmus MC)

Tianshi Wang (Erasmus MC)

Research Group
ImPhys/Medical Imaging
DOI related publication
https://doi.org/10.1117/12.2550998 Final published version
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Publication Year
2020
Language
English
Research Group
ImPhys/Medical Imaging
Volume number
11252
Article number
112520H
ISBN (electronic)
9781510632677
Event
Advanced Chemical Microscopy for Life Science and Translational Medicine 2020 (2020-02-01 - 2020-02-03), San Francisco, United States
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Abstract

The absorption of laser pulses by tissue leads not only to the generation of acoustic waves, but also to nanometer to sub-micrometer scale displacement. After the initial expansion, a quasi-steady state is achieved in a few microseconds. Previously we introduced the concept of thermo-elastic optical coherence tomography (TE-OCT) to "visualise" the rapid thermo-elastic expansion by measuring the Doppler phase shift rather than istening" to the acoustic wave as in photoacoustic imaging. In this study, we built a microscopic setup for high-speed 3D TE-OCT imaging, by means of thermo-elastic optical coherence microscopy (TE-OCM). The repetition rate of pulsed laser was set to 100 Hz and the line rate of the OCT system is 1.5 MHz. The OCT beam and the laser pulse were focused upon the same location on the sample FWHM spot sizes of 300 μm for the pulsed laser and 40 μm FWHM for the OCT beam. For each laser pulse, an M-mode OCT image consisting of 90 A-lines was acquired. The Doppler phase shift was extracted by comparing the phase signal before and after the pulse arrival. Within 6 minutes, a 3D TE-OCM image (10 × 10 × 4 mm3) can be acquired and processed. Imaging experiments were carried out in swine meat using 1210 nm excitation wavelength to highlight lipid in tissue. The results show that no significant displacement was detected in swine muscle while strong displacement was observed in lipid, owing to the optical absorption features. Furthermore, fatty tissue is easily identified in the 3D TE-OCM image while the conventional OCT images provides the structural information.

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