Terahertz imaging of human skin pathologies using laser feedback interferometry with quantum cascade lasers

Author:

Qi Xiaoqiong1ORCID,Bertling Karl1ORCID,Stark Mitchell S.2,Taimre Thomas1ORCID,Kao Yung-Ching2,Lim Yah Leng1ORCID,Han She1,O’Brien Blake3,Collins Angus3,Walsh Michael3,Torniainen Jari1,Gillespie Timothy1,Donose Bogdan C.1,Dean Paul4ORCID,Li Lian He4ORCID,Linfield Edmund H.4ORCID,Davies A. Giles4ORCID,Indjin Dragan4ORCID,Soyer H. Peter25,Rakić Aleksandar D.1ORCID

Affiliation:

1. The University of Queensland

2. Dermatology Research Centre

3. Sullivan Nicolaides Pathology

4. University of Leeds

5. Princess Alexandra Hospital

Abstract

Early detection of skin pathologies with current clinical diagnostic tools is challenging, particularly when there are no visible colour changes or morphological cues present on the skin. In this study, we present a terahertz (THz) imaging technology based on a narrow band quantum cascade laser (QCL) at 2.8 THz for human skin pathology detection with diffraction limited spatial resolution. THz imaging was conducted for three different groups of unstained human skin samples (benign naevus, dysplastic naevus, and melanoma) and compared to the corresponding traditional histopathologic stained images. The minimum thickness of dehydrated human skin that can provide THz contrast was determined to be 50 µm, which is approximately one half-wavelength of the THz wave used. The THz images from different types of 50 µm-thick skin samples were well correlated with the histological findings. The per-sample locations of pathology vs healthy skin can be separated from the density distribution of the corresponding pixels in the THz amplitude–phase map. The possible THz contrast mechanisms relating to the origin of image contrast in addition to water content were analyzed from these dehydrated samples. Our findings suggest that THz imaging could provide a feasible imaging modality for skin cancer detection that is beyond the visible.

Funder

Queensland Government

Advance Queensland

Trevor and Judish, St Baker Family Foundation

Merchant Charitable Foundation

Australian Nuclear Science and Technology Organisation

NHMRC Peter Doherty Fellowship and UQ Amplify Fellowship

NHMRC Medical Research Future Fund Next Generation Clinical Researchers Program Practitioner Fellowship

Engineering and Physical Sciences Research Council

Australian Research Council

Publisher

Optica Publishing Group

Subject

Atomic and Molecular Physics, and Optics,Biotechnology

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