Presentation + Paper
5 March 2021 New model for understanding the relationship between tissue composition and photothermal optical coherence tomography signals
Author Affiliations +
Abstract
Photothermal optical coherence tomography (PT-OCT) is an extension of OCT that forms images based on both scattering and absorption of light. Conventional OCT measures the path length of elastically back-scattered light. Variation of the tissue’s local refractive index due to photothermal modulation results in a modulated OCT phase signal that relates to the absorption of light. Detailed understanding of the PT-OCT signal has the potential to provide insight into the chemical composition of tissue, and may pave a way to detecting and characterizing lipid-rich atherosclerotic plaques with intracoronary imaging in patients. Here, we investigated the dependence of the PT-OCT signal on concentration of a specific tissue component. We modeled the generated thermal wave field and the resulting PT-OCT signal as a function of concentration of this component using the bio-heat equation. We found that the significant parameters in determining the amplitude of the PT-OCT signals are the density, the absorption coefficient and the specific heat of the sample. All these parameters vary as a function of the sample composition, leading to a non-linear relation between PT-OCT signal and the concentration of the component of interest. Only in special cases, e.g. the oxygenation level of blood, when the absorption coefficient is the only varying parameter does a linear dependence arise. PT-OCT experiments on tissue-like samples, prepared by mixing mayonnaise (<80% lipid) and agar gel (<90% water) to mimic lipid-rich atherosclerotic plaques, confirmed the non-linear relation predicted by our model.
Conference Presentation
© (2021) COPYRIGHT Society of Photo-Optical Instrumentation Engineers (SPIE). Downloading of the abstract is permitted for personal use only.
Mohammadhossein Salimi, Martin Villiger, and Nima Tabatabaei "New model for understanding the relationship between tissue composition and photothermal optical coherence tomography signals", Proc. SPIE 11655, Label-free Biomedical Imaging and Sensing (LBIS) 2021, 116550Q (5 March 2021); https://doi.org/10.1117/12.2583046
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