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Journal ArticleDOI

Multiwavelength three-dimensional near-infrared tomography of the breast: initial simulation, phantom, and clinical results

TLDR
The reconstructed tumor from the breast cancer patient was found to have a higher oxy-deoxy hemoglobin concentration and also a higher oxygen saturation level than the background, indicating a ductal carcinoma that corresponds well to histology findings.
Abstract
Three-dimensional (3D), multiwavelength near-infrared tomography has the potential to provide new physiological information about biological tissue function and pathological transformation. Fast and reliable measurements of multiwavelength data from multiple planes over a region of interest, together with adequate model-based nonlinear image reconstruction, form the major components of successful estimation of internal optical properties of the region. These images can then be used to examine the concentration of chromophores such as hemoglobin, deoxyhemoglobin, water, and lipids that in turn can serve to identify and characterize abnormalities located deep within the domain. We introduce and discuss a 3D modeling method and image reconstruction algorithm that is currently in place. Reconstructed images of optical properties are presented from simulated data, measured phantoms, and clinical data acquired from a breast cancer patient. It is shown that, with a relatively fast 3D inversion algorithm, useful images of optical absorption and scatter can be calculated with good separation and localization in all cases. It is also shown that, by use of the calculated optical absorption over a range of wavelengths, the oxygen saturation distribution of a tissue under investigation can be deduced from oxygenated and deoxygenated hemoglobin maps. With this method the reconstructed tumor from the breast cancer patient was found to have a higher oxy-deoxy hemoglobin concentration and also a higher oxygen saturation level than the background, indicating a ductal carcinoma that corresponds well to histology findings.

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Journal ArticleDOI

Diffuse optical tomography and spectroscopy of breast cancer and fetal brain

TL;DR: This research has translated diffuse optical tomography techniques into clinical research environment and the feasibility for trans-abdominal fetal brain oxygenation monitoring was demonstrated on pregnant ewes with induced fetal hypoxia.
Journal ArticleDOI

Spatio-temporal imaging of the hemoglobin in the compressed breast with diffuse optical tomography

TL;DR: To facilitate the image reconstruction, the hemodynamics in time is decompose into a linear combination of spatio-temporal basis functions, the coefficients of which are estimated using all of the data simultaneously, making use of a Newton-based nonlinear optimization algorithm.
Journal ArticleDOI

A femtosecond laser pacemaker for heart muscle cells

TL;DR: By increasing laser power above the window available for laser-cell synchronization, the use of cardiomyocytes as optically-triggered actuators is demonstrated, the first demonstration of remote optical control of carduomyocytes without requiring exogenous photosensitive compounds.
Journal ArticleDOI

Compensation for geometric mismodelling by anisotropies in optical tomography

TL;DR: It is shown that while geometric mismodelling may deteriorate the estimates of the absorption coefficient significantly, the proposed model enables the recovery of the main features and poses a simple anisotropic model for the diffusion coefficient.
Journal ArticleDOI

Scanning time-domain optical mammography: detection and characterization of breast tumors in vivo.

TL;DR: The paper reviews the results of a clinical study on scanning time-domain optical mammography comprising 154 patients carrying a total of 102 carcinomas validated by histology, and developments on instrumentation and data analysis are covered.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

Optical tomography in medical imaging

TL;DR: A review of methods for the forward and inverse problems in optical tomography can be found in this paper, where the authors focus on the highly scattering case found in applications in medical imaging, and to the problem of absorption and scattering reconstruction.
Journal ArticleDOI

Characterization of the near infrared absorption spectra of cytochrome aa3 and haemoglobin for the non-invasive monitoring of cerebral oxygenation.

TL;DR: The cytochrome aa3 spectrum in vivo from the brains of rats after replacing the blood with a fluorocarbon substitute is obtained and an algorithm for calculating the changes in oxygenated and deoxygenated haemoglobin and oxygenated cy tochrome a a3 in tissue from changes in near IR absorption is constructed.
Journal ArticleDOI

Concurrent MRI and diffuse optical tomography of breast after indocyanine green enhancement

TL;DR: It is found that DOT provides for localization and quantification of exogenous tissue chromophore concentrations and the use of ICG, an albumin bound absorbing dye in plasma, demonstrates the potential to differentiate disease based on the quantified enhancement of suspicious lesions.
Journal ArticleDOI

Imaging the body with diffuse optical tomography

TL;DR: The basic idea of DOT is introduced, the history of optical methods in medicine is reviewed, and a review of the tissue's optical properties, modes of operation for DOT, and the challenges which the development of DOT must overcome are detailed.
Journal ArticleDOI

A finite element approach for modeling photon transport in tissue.

TL;DR: A finite element method for deriving photon density inside an object, and photon flux at its boundary, assuming that the photon transport model is the diffusion approximation to the radiative transfer equation, is introduced herein.
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