| Literature DB >> 25366991 |
Pu Wang1, Teng Ma2, Mikhail N Slipchenko3, Shanshan Liang4, Jie Hui5, K Kirk Shung2, Sukesh Roy6, Michael Sturek7, Qifa Zhou2, Zhongping Chen8, Ji-Xin Cheng1.
Abstract
Lipid deposition inside the arterial wall is a key indicator of plaque vulnerability. An intravascular photoacoustic (IVPA) catheter is considered a promising device for quantifying the amount of lipid inside the arterial wall. Thus far, IVPA systems suffered from slow imaging speed (~50 s per frame) due to the lack of a suitable laser source for high-speed excitation of molecular overtone vibrations. Here, we report an improvement in IVPA imaging speed by two orders of magnitude, to 1.0 s per frame, enabled by a custom-built, 2-kHz master oscillator power amplifier (MOPA)-pumped, barium nitrite [Ba(NO3)2] Raman laser. This advancement narrows the gap in translating the IVPA technology to the clinical setting.Entities:
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Year: 2014 PMID: 25366991 PMCID: PMC4219167 DOI: 10.1038/srep06889
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Sci Rep ISSN: 2045-2322 Impact factor: 4.379
Figure 1Principles and schematics of the Raman laser system.
(A) The principle of the Ba(NO3)2 crystal-based Raman Shifter. (B) The Schematics of the Raman shifter: M1-M7: 45° 1064 nm reflective mirror; PBS: polarizing beam splitter; HWP: half wave plate; M8: resonator end mirror; M9: output coupler; M10: silver mirror. (C) The schematics of the MOPA system: Amp: amplifier; PH: pin hole; QR: quartz rotator; OI: optical isolator; FA: fiber amplifier; DL: Directly modulated diode laser.
Figure 2Specifications of the MOPA system and the Raman laser.
(A) The beam profile of the MOPA system. Scale bar: 1 mm. (B) The pulse duration of the 1064 nm from the MOPA system with different trigger pulse duration. (C) Pulse duration of the 1064 nm pump laser (black) and the Ba(NO3)2 based Raman laser (red). (D) The pulse-to-pulse variation of 1064 nm pump laser (black) and the Ba(NO3)2-based Raman laser (red). (E) The output spectra of the Ba(NO3)2 based Raman laser.
Comparison between the Q-switched Nd:YAG pumped Raman laser and the MOPA pumped Raman laser
| MOPA pumped | Q-switched Nd:YAG pumped | |
|---|---|---|
| 2000 Hz | 10 Hz | |
| 3.3% | 12% | |
| 1.6 | 11 | |
| 32% | 34.8% | |
| 2 mJ | 105 mJ | |
| 2–100 ns (tunable) | 5 ns (fixed) |
Figure 3Schematics of the IVPA system: Schematic (A) and photograph (B) of the IVPA probe. (C) Block diagram showing the data acquisition system. FC: fiber coupler; PC/DAQ: personal computer, data acquisition. (D) Photograph of the scanning assembly. (E) Schematic of the assembly of optical rotary joint and electrical slip rings.
Figure 4High-speed imaging of a lipid-mimicking phantom.
Photoacoustic (PA) image (A), ultrasound (US) image (B) and merged image (C) of a polyethylene (PE) tube. (D) Photoacoustic spectrum of the PE tube.
Figure 5High-speed IVPA (A) and IVUS (B) imaging of an atherosclerotic artery. (C) Merged PA/US image. (D) Histology of the artery cross section of the area imaged by IVPA method. The 5 mm spatial calibration applies to all panels.