Literature DB >> 28663913

Plum pudding random medium model of biological tissue toward remote microscopy from spectroscopic light scattering.

Min Xu1.   

Abstract

Biological tissue has a complex structure and exhibits rich spectroscopic behavior. There has been no tissue model until now that has been able to account for the observed spectroscopy of tissue light scattering and its anisotropy. Here we present, for the first time, a plum pudding random medium (PPRM) model for biological tissue which succinctly describes tissue as a superposition of distinctive scattering structures (plum) embedded inside a fractal continuous medium of background refractive index fluctuation (pudding). PPRM faithfully reproduces the wavelength dependence of tissue light scattering and attributes the "anomalous" trend in the anisotropy to the plum and the powerlaw dependence of the reduced scattering coefficient to the fractal scattering pudding. Most importantly, PPRM opens up a novel venue of quantifying the tissue architecture and microscopic structures on average from macroscopic probing of the bulk with scattered light alone without tissue excision. We demonstrate this potential by visualizing the fine microscopic structural alterations in breast tissue (adipose, glandular, fibrocystic, fibroadenoma, and ductal carcinoma) deduced from noncontact spectroscopic measurement.

Entities:  

Keywords:  (170.4580) Optical diagnostics for medicine; (170.4730) Optical pathology; (170.6510) Spectroscopy, tissue diagnostics; (290.7050) Turbid media

Year:  2017        PMID: 28663913      PMCID: PMC5480436          DOI: 10.1364/BOE.8.002879

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Biomed Opt Express        ISSN: 2156-7085            Impact factor:   3.732


  30 in total

1.  Scale-invariant behavior and vascular network formation in normal and tumor tissue.

Authors: 
Journal:  Phys Rev Lett       Date:  1995-09-18       Impact factor: 9.161

2.  Optical scattering properties of soft tissue: a discrete particle model.

Authors:  J M Schmitt; G Kumar
Journal:  Appl Opt       Date:  1998-05-01       Impact factor: 1.980

3.  A pulsed finite-difference time-domain (FDTD) method for calculating light scattering from biological cells over broad wavelength ranges.

Authors:  R Drezek; A Dunn; R Richards-Kortum
Journal:  Opt Express       Date:  2000-03-27       Impact factor: 3.894

4.  Optical properties of fat emulsions.

Authors:  René Michels; Florian Foschum; Alwin Kienle
Journal:  Opt Express       Date:  2008-04-14       Impact factor: 3.894

5.  Three-dimensional computation of focused beam propagation through multiple biological cells.

Authors:  Matthew S Starosta; Andrew K Dunn
Journal:  Opt Express       Date:  2009-07-20       Impact factor: 3.894

6.  Unified Mie and fractal scattering by cells and experimental study on application in optical characterization of cellular and subcellular structures.

Authors:  Min Xu; Tao T Wu; Jianan Y Qu
Journal:  J Biomed Opt       Date:  2008 Mar-Apr       Impact factor: 3.170

Review 7.  Optical properties of biological tissues: a review.

Authors:  Steven L Jacques
Journal:  Phys Med Biol       Date:  2013-05-10       Impact factor: 3.609

8.  Image reconstruction of effective Mie scattering parameters of breast tissue in vivo with near-infrared tomography.

Authors:  Xin Wang; Brian W Pogue; Shudong Jiang; Hamid Dehghani; Xiaomei Song; Subhadra Srinivasan; Ben A Brooksby; Keith D Paulsen; Christine Kogel; Steven P Poplack; Wendy A Wells
Journal:  J Biomed Opt       Date:  2006 Jul-Aug       Impact factor: 3.170

9.  Four-dimensional elastic light-scattering fingerprints as preneoplastic markers in the rat model of colon carcinogenesis.

Authors:  Hemant K Roy; Yang Liu; Ramesh K Wali; Young L Kim; Alexei K Kromine; Michael J Goldberg; Vadim Backman
Journal:  Gastroenterology       Date:  2004-04       Impact factor: 22.682

10.  Noninvasive evaluation of nuclear morphometry in breast lesions using multispectral diffuse optical tomography.

Authors:  Mohammad Reza Hajihashemi; Stephen R Grobmyer; Samer Z Al-Quran; Huabei Jiang
Journal:  PLoS One       Date:  2012-09-19       Impact factor: 3.240

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  2 in total

1.  In vivo real-time imaging of cutaneous hemoglobin concentration, oxygen saturation, scattering properties, melanin content, and epidermal thickness with visible spatially modulated light.

Authors:  Xinlin Chen; Weihao Lin; Chenge Wang; Shaoheng Chen; Jing Sheng; Bixin Zeng; M Xu
Journal:  Biomed Opt Express       Date:  2017-11-08       Impact factor: 3.732

2.  Quantitative diagnosis of tissue microstructure with wide-field high spatial frequency domain imaging.

Authors:  Weihao Lin; Bixin Zeng; Zili Cao; Xinlin Chen; Kaiyan Yang; Min Xu
Journal:  Biomed Opt Express       Date:  2018-06-04       Impact factor: 3.732

  2 in total

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