| Literature DB >> 29559653 |
Sadreddin Mahmoodkalayeh1,2,3, Hossein Z Jooya4, Ali Hariri1, Yang Zhou1, Qiuyun Xu1, Mohammad A Ansari3, Mohammad R N Avanaki5,6,7.
Abstract
We study the temperature dependence of the underlying mechanisms related to the signal strength and imaging depth in photoacoustic imaging. The presented theoretical and experimental results indicate that imaging depth can be improved by lowering the temperature of the intermediate medium that the laser passes through to reach the imaging target. We discuss the temperature dependency of optical and acoustic properties of the intermediate medium and their changes due to cooling. We demonstrate that the SNR improvement of the photoacoustic signal is mainly due to the reduction of Grüneisen parameter of the intermediate medium which leads to a lower level of background noise. These findings may open new possibilities toward the application of biomedical laser refrigeration.Entities:
Year: 2018 PMID: 29559653 PMCID: PMC5861112 DOI: 10.1038/s41598-018-22898-2
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Sci Rep ISSN: 2045-2322 Impact factor: 4.379
Figure 1Experimental setup of depth-temperature dependency in photoacoustic imaging. The imaging target (black covered resistance heating wire) is placed inside the chicken breast tissue at various distances (10 mm, 20 mm and 30 mm). Photoacoustic images are obtained at temperatures between 5 °C and 35 °C with 5 °C increments. The imaging target’s temperature is controlled and kept constant at 37 °C during the experiment.
Figure 2Simulation results of SNR improvement of PA signal with lowering the temperature at different temperatures and depths. (a) Scattering coefficient is held constant while Grüneisen parameter is changed with temperature. (b) Scattering coefficient is changed with temperature while Grüneisen parameter is held constant.
Figure 3Simulation results of SNR improvement of PA signal with lowering the temperature at different temperatures and depths. Both scattering coefficient and Grüneisen parameter are changed with temperature.
Figure 4The PA images projected on the ultrasound (US) image is presented for the case of 30 mm imaging depth at low (10 °C) and high (35 °C) temperatures. The imaging target temperature during the imaging process is kept constant at 37 °C. The intermediate medium is water in (a), and chicken breast tissue in (b).
Figure 5SNR of the imaging target (resistance heating wire) versus temperature at three different depths (10 mm, 20 mm, and 30 mm) inside (a) water, and (b) chicken breast tissue. STD stands for standard deviation.