| Literature DB >> 25023415 |
Fabrizio Martelli1, Paola Di Ninni1, Giovanni Zaccanti1, Davide Contini2, Lorenzo Spinelli3, Alessandro Torricelli2, Rinaldo Cubeddu4, Heidrun Wabnitz5, Mikhail Mazurenka5, Rainer Macdonald5, Angelo Sassaroli6, Antonio Pifferi4.
Abstract
We present the experimental implementation and validation of a phantom for diffuse optical imaging based on totally absorbing objects for which, in the previous paper [J. Biomed. Opt.18(6), 066014, (2013)], we have provided the basic theory. Totally absorbing objects have been manufactured as black polyvinyl chloride (PVC) cylinders and the phantom is a water dilution of intralipid-20% as the diffusive medium and India ink as the absorber, filled into a black scattering cell made of PVC. By means of time-domain measurements and of Monte Carlo simulations, we have shown the reliability, the accuracy, and the robustness of such a phantom in mimicking typical absorbing perturbations of diffuse optical imaging. In particular, we show that such a phantom can be used to generate any absorption perturbation by changing the volume and position of the totally absorbing inclusion.Entities:
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Year: 2014 PMID: 25023415 DOI: 10.1117/1.JBO.19.7.076011
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Biomed Opt ISSN: 1083-3668 Impact factor: 3.170