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Journal ArticleDOI

Optical Properties of Circulating Human Blood in the Wavelength Range 400-2500 nm.

TLDR
A spectrum of all three parameters was measured in the wavelength range 400-2500 nm for oxygenated and deoxygenated blood, showing that blood absorption followed the absorption behavior of haemoglobin and water.
Abstract
Knowledge about the optical properties μa,μs, and g of human blood plays an important role for many diagnostic and therapeutic applications in laser medicine and medical diagnostics. They strongly depend on physiological parameters such as oxygen saturation, osmolarity, flow conditions, haematocrit, etc. The integrating sphere technique and inverse Monte Carlo simulations were applied to measure μa,μs, and g of circulating human blood. At 633 nm the optical properties of human blood with a haematocrit of 10% and an oxygen saturation of 98% were found to be 0.210±0.002 mm-1 for μa,77.3±0.5 mm-1 for μs, and 0.994±0.001 for the g factor. An increase of the haematocrit up to 50% lead to a linear increase of absorption and reduced scattering. Variations in osmolarity and wall shear rate led to changes of all three parameters while variations in the oxygen saturation only led to a significant change of the absorption coefficient. A spectrum of all three parameters was measured in the wavelength range 400-2500 nm for oxygenated and deoxygenated blood, showing that blood absorption followed the absorption behavior of haemoglobin and water. The scattering coefficient decreased for wavelengths above 500 nm with approximately λ-1.7; the g factor was higher than 0.9 over the whole wavelength range. © 1999 Society of Photo-Optical Instrumentation Engineers.

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Citations
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Journal ArticleDOI

Optical properties of human skin, subcutaneous and mucous tissues in the wavelength range from 400 to 2000 nm

TL;DR: In this article, the optical properties of human skin, subcutaneous adipose tissue and human mucosa were measured in the wavelength range 400-2000 nm using a commercially available spectrophotometer with an integrating sphere.
Journal ArticleDOI

A review of indocyanine green fluorescent imaging in surgery

TL;DR: An overview of the recent surgical intraoperational applications of indocyanine green fluorescence imaging methods, the basics of the technology, and instrumentation used is given.
Journal ArticleDOI

Stimuli-responsive LbL capsules and nanoshells for drug delivery.

TL;DR: This review describes mechanisms and basic principles of stimuli effects, describes progress in the area, and gives an outlook on emerging trends such as theranostics and nanomedicine.
Journal ArticleDOI

Optical properties of skin, subcutaneous, and muscle tissues: a review

TL;DR: An overview of published absorption and scattering properties of skin and subcutaneous tissues measured in wide wavelength range is presented and basic principles of measurements of the tissue optical properties and techniques used for processing of the measured data are outlined.
Journal ArticleDOI

Optical properties of normal and cancerous human skin in the visible and near-infrared spectral range.

TL;DR: In this spectral region, the scattering of cancerous lesions is consistently lower than that of normal tissues, whereas absorption does not differ significantly, with the exception of nodular basal cell carcinomas (BCC).
References
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Book

Wave propagation and scattering in random media

TL;DR: This IEEE Classic Reissue presents a unified introduction to the fundamental theories and applications of wave propagation and scattering in random media and is expressly designed for engineers and scientists who have an interest in optical, microwave, or acoustic wave propagate and scattering.

Diffuse radiation in the Galaxy

TL;DR: In this paper, it was shown that the observed intensity of the diffuse light may be explained as scattered radiation if the phase function governing the scattering of starlight by the interstellar matter is strongly forward-throwing.
Journal ArticleDOI

Diffuse radiation in the Galaxy

TL;DR: In this article, it was shown that the observed intensity of the diffuse light may be explained as scattered radiation if the phase function governing the scattering of starlight by the interstellar matter is strongly forward-throwing.
Journal Article

Skin optics

TL;DR: The absorption and scattering data show that for all wavelengths considered, scattering is much more important than absorption, and any quantitative dosimetry for skin treated with (laser) light is inaccurate.
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