Real-time, 3-D microscopic tissue imaging could be a revolution for medical fields such as cancer diagnosis, minimally invasive surgery and ophthalmology.
University of Illinois researchers have developed a technique to computationally correct for aberrations in optical tomography, bringing the future of medical imaging into focus.
The computational technique could provide faster, less expensive and   higher resolution tissue imaging to a broader population of users. The   group describes its technique this week in the online early edition of   the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences.
“Computational techniques allow you to go beyond what the  optical  system can do alone, to ultimately get the best quality images  and  three-dimensional datasets,” said Steven Adie, a postdoctoral   researcher at the Beckman Institute for Advanced Science and Technology at Illinois. “This would be very useful for real-time imaging applications such as image-guided surgery.”  
Aberrations, such as astigmatism or distortion, plague  high-resolution  imaging. They make objects that should look like fine  points appear to  be blobs or streaks. The higher the resolution, the  worse the problem  becomes. It’s especially tricky in tissue imaging,  when precision is  vital to a correct diagnosis.
Adaptive optics can correct aberrations in imaging. It’s  widely used in  astronomy to correct for distortion as starlight filters  through the  atmosphere. A complex system of mirrors smooth out the  scattered light  before it enters the lens. Medical scientists have begun  applying  adaptive optics hardware to microscopes, hoping to improve  cell and  tissue imaging.
“It’s the same challenge, but instead of imaging through the   atmosphere, we’re imaging through tissue, and instead of imaging a star,   we’re imaging a cell,” said Stephen Boppart, a professor of electrical and computer engineering, of bioengineering and of internal medicine at the U. of I. “But a lot of the optical problems are the same.”
Unfortunately, hardware-based adaptive optics are complicated,  tedious  to align and extremely expensive. They can only focus on one  focal  plane at a time, so for tomography – 3-D models constructed from   sectional images as in a CT scan, for example – the mirrors have to be   adjusted and a new image scanned for each focal plane. In addition,   complex corrective systems are impractical for handheld or portable   devices, such as surgical probes or retinal scanners.
Therefore, instead of using hardware to correct a light  profile before  it enters the lens, the Illinois team uses computer  software to find  and correct aberrations after the image is taken.
Boppart's group  teamed up with with Scott Carney,  a professor of  electrical and computer engineering and the head of the  Optical Science  Group at the Beckman Institute, to develop the  technique, called  computational adaptive optics.
They demonstrated the  technique in  gel-based phantoms laced with microparticles as well as in  rat lung  tissue. They scan a tissue sample with an interferometric  microscope,  which is an optical imaging device using two beams of  light.
The  computer collects all of the data and then corrects the  images at all  depths within the volume. Blurry streaks become sharp  points, features  emerge from noise, and users can change parameters  with the click of a  mouse. 
“Being able to correct aberrations of the entire volume helps  us to get  a high-resolution image anywhere in that volume,” said Adie.  “Now you  can see tissue structures that previously were not very clear  at all.” 
Computed adaptive optics can be applied to any type of  interferometric  imaging, such as optical coherence tomography, and the  computations can  be performed on an ordinary desktop computer, making it  accessible for  many hospitals and clinics. 
Next, the researchers are working to refine the algorithms and  explore  applications. They are combining their computational adaptive  optics  with graphics processors, looking forward to real-time in-vivo   applications for surgery, minimally invasive biopsy and more.  
Subscribe to:
Post Comments (Atom)
 

 
 
 
 Posts
Posts
 
 
 
No comments:
Post a Comment