| Literature DB >> 29561905 |
Masanori Takabayashi1,2, Hassaan Majeed3, Andre Kajdacsy-Balla4, Gabriel Popescu2.
Abstract
Tissue refractive index provides important information about morphology at the nanoscale. Since the malignant transformation involves both intra- and inter-cellular changes in the refractive index map, the tissue disorder measurement can be used to extract important diagnosis information. Quantitative phase imaging (QPI) provides a practical means of extracting this information as it maps the optical path-length difference (OPD) across a tissue sample with sub-wavelength sensitivity. In this work, we employ QPI to compare the tissue disorder strength between benign and malignant breast tissue histology samples. Our results show that disease progression is marked by a significant increase in the disorder strength. Since our imaging system can be added as an upgrading module to an existing microscope, we anticipate that it can be integrated easily in the pathology work flow.Entities:
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Year: 2018 PMID: 29561905 PMCID: PMC5862460 DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0194320
Source DB: PubMed Journal: PLoS One ISSN: 1932-6203 Impact factor: 3.240
Fig 1SLIM system.
(A) Schematic setup. (B) The phase rings and (C) their corresponding intensity images captured by CCD. (D) The retrieved quantitative phase image.
Fig 2Quantitative phase images and their enlarged view.
(A) Benign and (B) malignant breast tissues.
Fig 3Procedures.
(A) Original phase image. (B) Local phase average map. (C) Local phase variance map. (D) Local phase fluctuation map. (E) Local phase fluctuation map with background reduction mask. (F) Local phase fluctuation map with edge reduction filter. (G) 2D spatial autocorrelation. (H) 1D spatial autocorrelation.
Fig 4Disorder strength maps.
(A) Benign and (B) malignant tissues.
Fig 5Disorder strength of benign (N = 20) and malignant (N = 20) tissues.