| Literature DB >> 16409072 |
Vasilis Ntziachristos1, Gordon Turner, Joshua Dunham, Stephen Windsor, Antoine Soubret, Jorge Ripoll, Helen A Shih.
Abstract
Fluorescence imaging of tissues has gained significant attention in recent years due to the emergence of appropriate reporter technologies that enable noninvasive sensing of molecular function in vivo. Two major approaches have been used so far for fluorescence molecular imaging, i.e., epi-illumination (reflectance) imaging and fluorescence molecular tomography. Transillumination is an alternative approach that has been employed for imaging tissues in the past and could be similarly beneficial for fluorescence molecular imaging. We investigate data normalization schemes in reflectance and transillumination mode and experimentally demonstrate that normalized transillumination offers significant advantages over planar reflectance imaging and over nonnormalized methods. Our observations, based on phantoms and on postmortem and in vivo mouse measurements display image quality improvement, superior depth sensitivity, and improved imaging accuracy over the nonnormalized methods examined. Normalized planar imaging retains implementation simplicity and could be used to improve on standard fluorescence reflectance imaging and as a simplified alternative to the more integrated and accurate tomographic methods.Entities:
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Year: 2005 PMID: 16409072 DOI: 10.1117/1.2136148
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Biomed Opt ISSN: 1083-3668 Impact factor: 3.170