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Real-time molecular imaging of near-surface tissue using Raman spectroscopy

Medicine and Health

Real-time molecular imaging of near-surface tissue using Raman spectroscopy

W. Yang, F. Knorr, et al.

This innovative research led by Wei Yang, Florian Knorr, Ines Latka, Matthias Vogt, Gunther O. Hofmann, Jürgen Popp, and Iwan W. Schie introduces a groundbreaking fiber optic probe-based Raman imaging system. It enables real-time molecular visualizations of tissue boundaries, achieving unparalleled spatial and topology resolution through advanced techniques in augmented chemical reality. Experience the future of molecular imaging applied to clinical tissue assessment.

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~3 min • Beginner • English
Abstract
The steady progress in medical diagnosis and treatment of diseases largely hinges on the steady development and improvement of modern imaging modalities. Raman spectroscopy has attracted increasing attention for clinical applications as it is label-free, non-invasive, and delivers molecular fingerprinting information of a sample. In combination with fiber optic probes, it also allows easy access to different body parts of a patient. However, image acquisition with fiber optic probes is currently not possible. Here, we introduce a fiber optic probe-based Raman imaging system for the real-time molecular virtual reality data visualization of chemical boundaries on a computer screen and the physical world. The approach is developed around a computer vision-based positional tracking system in conjunction with photometric stereo and augmented and mixed chemical reality, enabling molecular imaging and direct visualization of molecular boundaries of three-dimensional surfaces. The proposed approach achieves a spatial resolution of 0.5 mm in the transverse plane and a topology resolution of 0.6 mm, with a spectral sampling frequency of 10 Hz, and can be used to image large tissue areas in a few minutes, making it highly suitable for clinical tissue-boundary demarcation. A variety of applications on biological samples, i.e., distribution of pharmaceutical compounds, brain-tumor phantom, and various types of sarcoma have been characterized, showing that the system enables rapid and intuitive assessment of molecular boundaries.
Publisher
Light: Science & Applications
Published On
Apr 26, 2022
Authors
Wei Yang, Florian Knorr, Ines Latka, Matthias Vogt, Gunther O. Hofmann, Jürgen Popp, Iwan W. Schie
Tags
Raman spectroscopy
molecular imaging
fiber optic probe
augmented reality
real-time visualization
clinical applications
tissue boundaries
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