Open Access
1 March 2010 System development for high frequency ultrasound-guided fluorescence quantification of skin layers
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Abstract
A high frequency ultrasound-coupled fluorescence tomography system, primarily designed for imaging of protoporphyrin IX production in skin tumors in vivo, is demonstrated for the first time. The design couples fiber-based spectral sampling of the protoporphyrin IX fluorescence emission with high frequency ultrasound imaging, allowing thin-layer fluorescence intensities to be quantified. The system measurements are obtained by serial illumination of four linear source locations, with parallel detection at each of five interspersed detection locations, providing 20 overlapping measures of subsurface fluorescence from both superficial and deep locations in the ultrasound field. Tissue layers are defined from the segmented ultrasound images and diffusion theory used to estimate the fluorescence in these layers. The system calibration is presented with simulation and phantom validation of the system in multilayer regions. Pilot in-vivo data are also presented, showing recovery of subcutaneous tumor tissue values of protoporphyrin IX in a subcutaneous U251 tumor, which has less fluorescence than the skin.
©(2010) Society of Photo-Optical Instrumentation Engineers (SPIE)
Josiah D. Gruber, Akshat Paliwal, Venkat Krishnaswamy, Hamid R. Ghadyani, Michael Jermyn, Julie A. O'Hara, Scott C. Davis, Joanna S. Kerley-Hamilton, Nicholas Shworak, Edward V. Maytin M.D., Tayyaba Hasan, and Brian W. Pogue "System development for high frequency ultrasound-guided fluorescence quantification of skin layers," Journal of Biomedical Optics 15(2), 026028 (1 March 2010). https://doi.org/10.1117/1.3374040
Published: 1 March 2010
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CITATIONS
Cited by 27 scholarly publications.
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KEYWORDS
Luminescence

Tumors

Skin

Image segmentation

Ultrasonography

Tissues

Imaging systems

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