• Title/Summary/Keyword: Tissue optics

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The Effect of the UV irridation on the Cornea (UV조사가 각막에 미치는 영향)

  • Kim, Douk Hoon;Mun, Jung Hak
    • Journal of Korean Ophthalmic Optics Society
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    • v.1 no.2
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    • pp.19-35
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    • 1996
  • This study was performed on the mouse to estimate the effect of UV radiation on the cornea in UV clean bench by LM & SEM. The results are as follows In the control groups, The cornea tissue have relatively compact and each layer have well identify, and the thick of cornea have constant. In the increasing experimental time, the experimental result have very different. The early experimental groups results have not severely degeneration. But, some substrate layer have a swelling and some epithelial tissue have not normal shape. The middle experimental groups results have very swelling of the stroma, the vacoule of some region the condensation of the epithelium, and the irregular arrangement of the endothelium. The last experimental groups results have shirinking of cornea tissue, the swelling and vacoule of the end endothelium, the partially disruption of epithelium, the irregular thick of the corneal tissue.

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A Dynamic Accuracy Estimation for GPU-based Monte Carlo Simulation in Tissue Optics

  • Cai, Fuhong;Lu, Wen
    • Current Optics and Photonics
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    • v.1 no.5
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    • pp.551-555
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    • 2017
  • Tissue optics is a well-established and extensively studied area. In the last decades, Monte Carlo simulation (MCS) has been one of the standard tools for simulation of light propagation in turbid media. The utilization of parallel processing exhibits dramatic increase in the speed of MCS's of photon migration. Some calculations based on MCS can be completed within a few seconds. Since the MCS's have the potential to become a real time calculation method, a dynamic accuracy estimation, which is also known as history by history statistical estimators, is required in the simulation code to automatically terminate the MCS as the results' accuracy achieves a high enough level. In this work, spatial and time-domain GPU-based MCS, adopting the dynamic accuracy estimation, are performed to calculate the light dose/reflectance in homogeneous and heterogeneous tissue media. This dynamic accuracy estimation can effectively derive the statistical error of optical dose/reflectance during the parallel Monte Carlo process.

Application of Terahertz Spectroscopy and Imaging in the Diagnosis of Prostate Cancer

  • Zhang, Ping;Zhong, Shuncong;Zhang, Junxi;Ding, Jian;Liu, Zhenxiang;Huang, Yi;Zhou, Ning;Nsengiyumva, Walter;Zhang, Tianfu
    • Current Optics and Photonics
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    • v.4 no.1
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    • pp.31-43
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    • 2020
  • The feasibility of the application of terahertz electromagnetic waves in the diagnosis of prostate cancer was examined. Four samples of incomplete cancerous prostatic paraffin-embedded tissues were examined using terahertz spectral imaging (TPI) system and the results obtained by comparing the absorption coefficient and refractive index of prostate tumor, normal prostate tissue and smooth muscle from one of the paraffin tissue masses examined were reported. Three hundred and sixty cases of absorption coefficients from one of the paraffin tissues examined were used as raw data to classify these three tissues using the Principal Component Analysis (PCA) and Least Squares Support Vector Machine (LS-SVM). An excellent classification with an accuracy of 92.22% in the prediction set was achieved. Using the distribution information of THz reflection signal intensity from sample surface and absorption coefficient of the sample, an attempt was made to use the TPI system to identify the boundaries of the different tissues involved (prostate tumors, normal and smooth muscles). The location of three identified regions in the terahertz images (frequency domain slice absorption coefficient imaging, 1.2 THz) were compared with those obtained from the histopathologic examination. The tissue tumor region had a distinctively visible color and could well be distinguished from other tissue regions in terahertz images. Results indicate that a THz spectroscopy imaging system can be efficiently used in conjunction with the proposed advanced computer-based mathematical analysis method to identify tumor regions in the paraffin tissue mass of prostate cancer.

Optical Design of a Snapshot Nonmydriatic Fundus-imaging Spectrometer Based on the Eye Model

  • Zhao, Xuehui;Chang, Jun;Zhang, Wenchao;Wang, Dajiang;Chen, Weilin;Cao, Jiajing
    • Current Optics and Photonics
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    • v.6 no.2
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    • pp.151-160
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    • 2022
  • Fundus images can reflect ocular diseases and systemic diseases such as glaucoma, diabetes mellitus, and hypertension. Thus, research on fundus-detection equipment is of great importance. The fundus camera has been widely used as a kind of noninvasive detection equipment. Most existing devices can only obtain two-dimensional (2D) retinal-image information, yet the fundus of the human eye also has spectral characteristics. The fundus has many pigments, and their different distributions in the eye lead to dissimilar tissue penetration for light waves, which can reflect the corresponding fundus structure. To obtain more abundant information and improve the detection level of equipment, a snapshot nonmydriatic fundus imaging spectral system, including fundus-imaging spectrometer and illumination system, is studied in this paper. The system uses a microlens array to realize snapshot technology; information can be obtained from only a single exposure. The system does not need to dilate the pupil. Hence, the operation is simple, which reduces its influence on the detected object. The system works in the visible and near-infrared bands (550-800 nm), with a volume less than 400 mm × 120 mm × 75 mm and a spectral resolution better than 6 nm.

Utilizing Optical Phantoms for Biomedical-optics Technology: Recent Advances and Challenges

  • Ik Hwan Kwon;Hoon-Sup Kim;Do Yeon Kim;Hyun-Ji Lee;Sang-Won Lee
    • Current Optics and Photonics
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    • v.8 no.4
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    • pp.327-344
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    • 2024
  • Optical phantoms are essential in optical imaging and measurement instruments for performance evaluation, calibration, and quality control. They enable precise measurement of image resolution, accuracy, sensitivity, and contrast, which are crucial for both research and clinical diagnostics. This paper reviews the recent advancements and challenges in phantoms for optical coherence tomography, photoacoustic imaging, digital holographic microscopy, optical diffraction tomography, and oximetry tools. We explore the fundamental principles of each technology, the key factors in phantom development, and the evaluation criteria. Additionally, we discuss the application of phantoms used for enhancing optical-image quality. This investigation includes the development of realistic biological and clinical tissue-mimicking phantoms, emphasizing their role in improving the accuracy and reliability of optical imaging and measurement instruments in biomedical and clinical research.

Research on Subcutaneous Pulse Shape Measurement by Near-infrared Moiré Technique

  • Chen, Ying-Yun;Liu, Zhizhen;Du, Jian;Chang, Rong-Seng
    • Journal of the Optical Society of Korea
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    • v.19 no.2
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    • pp.123-129
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    • 2015
  • A pulse is generated when the heart pumps blood into the arterial system. The heart pumps blood only when it contracts, not when it relaxes; therefore, blood enters the arterial system in a cyclical form. Artery beating is visible in some parts of the body surface, such as the radial artery of the wrist. This paper mainly uses the feature in which near-infrared spectroscopy penetrates skin to construct a non-invasive measurement system that can measure small vibration in the subcutaneous tissue of the human body, and then uses it for the pulse measurement. This measurement system uses the optical moir$\acute{e}$ principle, together with the fringe displacement made by small vibration in the subcutaneous tissue, and an image analysis program to calculate the height variation from small vibrations in the subcutaneous tissue. It completes a measurement system that records height variation with time, and that together with a fast Fourier transform (FFT) program, they can convert the pulse waveform generated by vibration (time-amplitude) to heartbeat frequency (frequency-amplitude). This is a new and non-invasive medical assistance system for measuring the pulse of the human body, with the advantages of being simple, fast, safe and objective.

Super-resolution Microscopy with Adaptive Optics for Volumetric Imaging

  • Park, Sangjun;Min, Cheol Hong;Han, Seokyoung;Choi, Eunjin;Cho, Kyung-Ok;Jang, Hyun-Jong;Kim, Moonseok
    • Current Optics and Photonics
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    • v.6 no.6
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    • pp.550-564
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    • 2022
  • Optical microscopy is a useful tool for study in the biological sciences. With an optical microscope, we can observe the micro world of life such as tissues, cells, and proteins. A fluorescent dye or a fluorescent protein provides an opportunity to mark a specific target in the crowd of biological samples, so that an image of a specific target can be observed by an optical microscope. The optical microscope, however, is constrained in resolution due to diffraction limit. Super-resolution microscopy made a breakthrough with this diffraction limit. Using a super-resolution microscope, many biomolecules are observed beyond the diffraction limit in cells. In the case of volumetric imaging, the super-resolution techniques are only applied to a limited area due to long imaging time, multiple scattering of photons, and sample-induced aberration in deep tissue. In this article, we review recent advances in super-resolution microscopy for volumetric imaging. The super-resolution techniques have been integrated with various modalities, such as a line-scan confocal microscope, a spinning disk confocal microscope, a light sheet microscope, and point spread function engineering. Super-resolution microscopy combined with adaptive optics by compensating for wave distortions is a promising method for deep tissue imaging and biomedical applications.

Stiffness Comparison of Tissue Phantoms using Optical Coherence Elastography without a Load Cell

  • Chae, Yu-Gyeong;Park, Eun-Kee;Jeon, Min Yong;Jeon, Byeong-Hwan;Ahn, Yeh-Chan
    • Current Optics and Photonics
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    • v.1 no.1
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    • pp.17-22
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    • 2017
  • Mechanical property of tissue is closely related to diseases such as breast cancer, prostate cancer, cirrhosis of the liver, and atherosclerosis. Therefore measurement of tissue mechanical property is important for a better diagnosis. Ultrasound elastography has been developed as a diagnostic modality for a number of diseases that maps mechanical property of tissue. Optical coherence elastography (OCE) has a higher spatial resolution than ultrasound elastography. OCE, therefore, could be a great help for early diagnosis. In this study, we made tissue phantoms and measured their compressive moduli with a rheometer measuring the response to applied force. Uniaxial strain of the tissue phantom was also measured with OCE by using cross-correlation of speckles and compared with the results from the rheometer. In order to compare stiffness of tissue phantoms by OCE, the applied force should be measured in addition to the strain. We, however, did not use a load cell that directly measures the applied force for each sample. Instead, we utilized one silicone film (called as reference phantom) for all OCE measurements that indirectly indicated the amount of the applied force by deformation. Therefore, all measurements were based on displacement, which was natural and effective for image-based elastography such as OCE.

The Effect of Laser Irridation on the Ultrastructure of Retina (Laser 조사가 망막의 미세구조에 미치는 영향)

  • Kim, Douk Hoon;Mun, Jung Hak
    • Journal of Korean Ophthalmic Optics Society
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    • v.1 no.1
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    • pp.15-22
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    • 1996
  • The fine structure of retinal tissue was studied to investigate on effect of Laser irridation on the ICR mouse with electron microscope. The results obtained were as follows: 1. At the normal groups, the most retinal layers were a complex structure, consisting of several specific cells and nerve fiver. 2. In the increasing time of Laser irridation, each cell layer of retina was not uniform of the structure and band. The visual cells were severely heterochromatin swelling of cytoplasm, irregular shape & heterochromatin of nuclear, and disappear of some cytoplasm. The nucleus and nerve fiber of retinal layer was a very irregular shape, formation of vesicle, not identify of each intercellular boundary. The pigment epithelial cells were not an uniform, a large vesicle formation of cytoplasm, and a condensation & very irregular shape of nucleus.

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