Load-dependent optical coherence tomography attenuation imaging: How tissue mechanics can influence optical scattering

Author:

Gong Peijun123ORCID,Boman Imogen23ORCID,Zilkens Renate24ORCID,Yeomans Chris5,Hardie Mireille5ORCID,Rijhumal Anmol5,Saunders Christobel M.56ORCID,Kennedy Brendan F.2378

Affiliation:

1. 1 Key Laboratory for Biomedical Engineering of Ministry of Education, Zhejiang University, Hangzhou, China

2. BRITElab, Harry Perkins Institute of Medical Research, QEII Medical Centre, Nedlands and Centre for Medical Research, The University of Western Australia 2 , Perth, WA, Australia

3. Department of Electrical, Electronic and Computer Engineering, School of Engineering, The University of Western Australia 3 , Perth, WA, Australia

4. Division of Surgery, Medical School, The University of Western Australia 4 , Perth, WA, Australia

5. PathWest, Fiona Stanley Hospital 5 , Murdoch, WA, Australia

6. Department of Surgery, Medical School, The University of Melbourne 6 , Melbourne, Vic, Australia

7. Australian Research Council Centre for Personalised Therapeutics Technologies 7 , Melbourne, Vic, Australia

8. Institute of Physics, Faculty of Physics, Astronomy and Informatics, Nicolaus Copernicus University in Toruń 8 , Grudziadzka 5, Toruń, Poland

Abstract

Mechanical load imparted to tissue, for example via handheld imaging probes, leads to tissue deformation, altering the distribution of tissue microstructure and, consequently, attenuation of light and image formation in optical imaging. In mechanically heterogeneous tissue, the load can result in spatially varying deformation and, therefore, spatially varying changes in the attenuation of light, which may provide additional image contrast. To investigate this potential, an assessment of the spatially resolved impact of mechanical deformation of the tissue on optical imaging is critical; however, it is challenging to incorporate stress mapping into optical imaging without obscuring the detection of photons. To address this, we present the novel integration of stress imaging using optical palpation with attenuation imaging based on optical coherence tomography (OCT). The method was implemented using a compliant silicone sensor incorporated into a custom handheld OCT probe, providing two-dimensional stress imaging with concurrent attenuation imaging. Attenuation imaging with varying mechanical loads was demonstrated on 19 tissue regions acquired from eight freshly excised human breast specimens. The results demonstrated distinct characteristics for different breast tissue types: benign stroma showed relatively large increases in attenuation (e.g., ∼0.3 to 0.4 mm−1/kPa) over a low stress range (∼2 to 10 kPa), while cancerous tissue showed markedly small increases in attenuation (e.g., ∼0.005 to 0.02 mm−1/kPa) mainly over a medium to high stress range (∼10 to 90 kPa). The integration of stress imaging with attenuation imaging provided a pilot assessment of the spatially resolved impact of tissue mechanical heterogeneity on optical attenuation, providing novel image contrast by encoding variations in mechanical properties on optical attenuation in tissue.

Publisher

AIP Publishing

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