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1.
Sensors (Basel) ; 24(11)2024 Jun 05.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38894444

ABSTRACT

This work describes a sapphire cryo-applicator with the ability to sense tissue freezing depth during cryosurgery by illumination of tissue and analyzing diffuse optical signals in a steady-state regime. The applicator was manufactured by the crystal growth technique and has several spatially resolved internal channels for accommodating optical fibers. The method of reconstructing freezing depth proposed in this work requires one illumination and two detection channels. The analysis of the detected intensities yields the estimation of the time evolution of the effective attenuation coefficient, which is compared with the theoretically calculated values obtained for a number of combinations of tissue parameters. The experimental test of the proposed applicator and approach for freezing depth reconstruction was performed using gelatin-based tissue phantom and rat liver tissue in vivo. It revealed the ability to estimate depth up to 8 mm. The in vivo study confirmed the feasibility of the applicator to sense the freezing depth of living tissues despite the possible diversity of their optical parameters. The results justify the potential of the described design of a sapphire instrument for cryosurgery.


Subject(s)
Aluminum Oxide , Cryosurgery , Freezing , Liver , Phantoms, Imaging , Animals , Cryosurgery/methods , Rats , Liver/surgery , Liver/diagnostic imaging , Aluminum Oxide/chemistry
2.
J Biophotonics ; 16(3): e202200288, 2023 03.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36510652

ABSTRACT

This article describes a sapphire cryoprobe as a promising solution to the significant problem of modern cryosurgery that is the monitoring of tissue freezing. This probe consists of a sapphire rod manufactured by the edge-defined film-fed growth technique from Al2 O3 melt and optical fibers accommodated inside the rod and connected to the source and the detector. The probe's design enables detection of spatially resolved diffuse reflected intensities of tissue optical response, which are used for the estimation of tissue freezing depth. The current type of the 12.5-mm diameter sapphire probe cooled down by the liquid nitrogen assumes a superficial cryoablation. The experimental test made by using a gelatin-intralipid tissue phantom shows the feasibility of such concept, revealing the capabilities of monitoring the freezing depth up to 10 mm by the particular instrumentation realization of the probe. This justifies a potential of sapphire-based instruments aided by optical diagnosis in modern cryosurgery.


Subject(s)
Aluminum Oxide , Cryosurgery , Freezing , Feasibility Studies , Cryosurgery/methods
3.
Lasers Surg Med ; 54(4): 611-622, 2022 04.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-34918347

ABSTRACT

OBJECTIVES: The development of compact diagnostic probes and instruments with an ability to direct access to organs and tissues and integration of these instruments into surgical workflows is an important task of modern physics and medicine. The need for such tools is essential for surgical oncology, where intraoperative visualization and demarcation of tumor margins define further prognosis and survival of patients. In this paper, the possible solution for this intraoperative imaging problem is proposed and its feasibility to detect tumorous tissue is studied experimentally. METHODS: For this aim, the sapphire scalpel was developed and fabricated using the edge-defined film-fed growth technique aided by mechanical grinding, polishing, and chemical sharpening of the cutting edge. It possesses optical transparency, mechanical strength, chemical inertness, and thermal resistance alongside the presence of the as-grown hollow capillary channels in its volume for accommodating optical fibers. The rounding of the cutting edge exceeds the same for metal scalpels and can be as small as 110 nm. Thanks to these features, sapphire scalpel combines tissue dissection with light delivering and optical diagnosis. The feasibility for the tumor margin detection was studied, including both gelatin-based tissue phantoms and ex vivo freshly excised specimens of the basal cell carcinoma from humans and the glioma model 101.8 from rats. These tumors are commonly diagnosed either non-invasively or intraoperatively using different modalities of fluorescence spectroscopy and imaging, which makes them ideal candidates for our feasibility test. For this purpose, fiber-based spectroscopic measurements of the backscattered laser radiation and the fluorescence signals were carried out in the visible range. RESULTS: Experimental studies show the feasibility of the proposed sapphire scalpel to provide a 2-mm-resolution of the tumor margins' detection, along with an ability to distinguish the tumor invasion region, which results from analysis of the backscattered optical fields and the endogenous or exogenous fluorescence data. CONCLUSIONS: Our findings justified a strong potential of the sapphire scalpel for surgical oncology. However, further research and engineering efforts are required to optimize the sapphire scalpel geometry and the optical diagnosis protocols to meet the requirements of oncosurgery, including diagnosis and resection of neoplasms with different localizations and nosologies.


Subject(s)
Aluminum Oxide , Neoplasms , Animals , Humans , Lasers , Margins of Excision , Optical Fibers , Phantoms, Imaging , Rats
4.
J Biomed Opt ; 26(4)2021 04.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-33913278

ABSTRACT

The editorial introduces a special section of the Journal of Biomedical Optics on Advances in Terahertz Biomedical Science and Applications. This special section includes one review and ten research papers addressing the complex challenges of terahertz biophotonics and related areas of biomedical optics.


Subject(s)
Histological Techniques , Optics and Photonics
5.
J Biophotonics ; 13(12): e202000297, 2020 12.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-32881362

ABSTRACT

In this work, a thorough analysis of hyperosmotic agents for the immersion optical clearing (IOC) in terahertz (THz) range was performed. It was aimed at the selection of agents for the efficient enhancement of penetration depth of THz waves into biological tissues. Pulsed spectroscopy in the frequency range of 0.1 to 2.5 THz was applied for investigation of the optical properties of common IOC agents. Using the collimated transmission spectroscopy in visible range, binary diffusion coefficients of tissue water and agent in ex vivo rat brain tissue were measured. IOC agents were objectively compared using two-dimensional nomogram, accounting for their THz-wave absorption coefficients and binary diffusion coefficients. The results of this study demonstrate an interplay between the penetration depth enhancement and the diffusion rate and allow for pointing out glycerol as an optimal agent among the considered ones for particular applications in THz biophotonics.


Subject(s)
Glycerol , Immersion , Animals , Brain/diagnostic imaging , Diffusion , Rats , Water
6.
J Biophotonics ; 13(10): e202000164, 2020 10.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-32681714

ABSTRACT

A sapphire shaped capillary needle designed for collimating and focusing of laser radiation was proposed and fabricated by the edge-defined film-fed growth technique. It features an as-grown surface quality, high transparency for visible and near-infrared radiation, high thermal and chemical resistance and the complex shape of the tip, which protects silica fibers. The needle's geometrical parameters can be adjusted for use in various situations, such as type of tissue, modality of therapy and treatment protocol. The focusing effect was demonstrated numerically and observed experimentally during coagulation of the ex vivo porcine liver samples. This needle in combination with 0.22NA optical fiber allows intensive and uniform coagulation of 150 mm3 volume interstitially and 30 mm3 superficially by laser exposure with 280 J without tissue carbonization and fiber damaging along with delicate treatment of small areas. The demonstrated results reveal the perspectives of the proposed sapphire microfocusing needle for laser surgery and therapy.


Subject(s)
Laser Therapy , Animals , Lasers , Needles , Optical Fibers , Swine
7.
J Biomed Opt ; 24(12): 1-7, 2019 12.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-31849206

ABSTRACT

Sapphire capillary needles fabricated by edge-defined film-fed growth (EFG) technique hold strong potential in laser thermotherapy and photodynamic therapy, thanks to the advanced physical properties of sapphire. These needles feature an as-grown optical quality, their length is tens of centimeters, and they contain internal capillary channels, with open or closed ends. They can serve as optically transparent bearing elements with optical fibers introduced into their capillary channels in order to deliver laser radiation to biological tissues for therapeutic and, in some cases, diagnostic purposes. A potential advantage of the EFG-grown sapphire needles is associated with an ability to form the tip of a needle with complex geometry, either as-grown or mechanically treated, aimed at controlling the output radiation pattern. In order to examine a potential of the radiation pattern shaping, we present a set of fabricated sapphire needles with different tips. We studied the radiation patterns formed at the output of these needles using a He-Ne laser as a light source, and used intralipid-based tissue phantoms to proof the concept experimentally and the Monte-Carlo modeling to proof it numerically. The observed results demonstrate a good agreement between the numerical and experimental data and reveal an ability to control within wide limits the direction of tissue exposure to light and the amount of exposed tissue by managing the sapphire needle tip geometry.


Subject(s)
Aluminum Oxide , Laser Therapy/instrumentation , Needles , Equipment Design , Phantoms, Imaging , Photochemotherapy/instrumentation
8.
J Biomed Opt ; 23(9): 1-9, 2018 04.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-29644811

ABSTRACT

We present the nanoparticle-enabled experimentally trained wavelet-domain denoising method for optical coherence tomography (OCT). It employs an experimental training algorithm based on imaging of a test-object, made of the colloidal suspension of the monodisperse nanoparticles and contains the microscale inclusions. The geometry and the scattering properties of the test-object are known a priori allowing us to set the criteria for the training algorithm. Using a wide set of the wavelet kernels and the wavelet-domain filtration approaches, the appropriate filter is constructed based on the test-object imaging. We apply the proposed approach and chose an efficient wavelet denoising procedure by considering the combinations of the decomposition basis from five wavelet families with eight types of the filtration threshold. We demonstrate applicability of the wavelet-filtering for the in vitro OCT image of human brain meningioma. The observed results prove high efficiency of the proposed OCT image denoising technique.


Subject(s)
Image Processing, Computer-Assisted/methods , Nanoparticles/chemistry , Tomography, Optical Coherence/methods , Algorithms , Brain Neoplasms/diagnostic imaging , Humans , Meningioma/diagnostic imaging , Wavelet Analysis
9.
Sci Rep ; 7(1): 13727, 2017 10 23.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-29062107

ABSTRACT

Tunable interparticle interactions in colloidal suspensions are of great interest because of their fundamental and practical significance. In this paper we present a new experimental setup for self-assembly of colloidal particles in two-dimensional systems, where the interactions are controlled by external rotating electric fields. The maximal magnitude of the field in a suspension is 25 V/mm, the field homogeneity is better than 1% over the horizontal distance of 250 µm, and the rotation frequency is in the range of 40 Hz to 30 kHz. Based on numerical electrostatic calculations for the developed setup with eight planar electrodes, we found optimal experimental conditions and performed demonstration experiments with a suspension of 2.12 µm silica particles in water. Thanks to its technological flexibility, the setup is well suited for particle-resolved studies of fundamental generic phenomena occurring in classical liquids and solids, and therefore it should be of interest for a broad community of soft matter, photonics, and material science.

10.
IEEE Trans Nanobioscience ; 8(1): 20-32, 2009 Mar.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-19304500

ABSTRACT

The main focus of this paper is the description of qualitatively new facilities for diagnostics of biological and medical objects and medical therapy obtained by applications of nanocrystalline scintillators. These facilities are based on abilities of nanoscintillators to selective conjugation with various biomolecular objects and noticeable variations of their atomic structures, X-ray diffraction (XRD) patterns, and light-emission characteristics induced by modifications of conditions on their external surfaces. Experimental results presented in this paper provide development of detection in vivo just inside a living organism of various viruses, cancer cells, and other pathological macromolecules by means of scanning X-ray diffractometry of nanoparticles introduced into the body. These data are produced by selective adsorption of pathological bioobjects by these nanoparticles and subsequent modifications of their XRD patterns. Application of narrow collimated X-ray beams and new types of X-ray detector matrices providing microscopic spatial resolution due to usage of nanoscintillators enables determination of the regions where these pathologies are localized with high accuracy. The procedure of detection of pathological organelles by this method improves possibilities for effective destruction of these pathologies by low-dose X-ray irradiation of the places of their localization. High effectiveness of this X-ray destruction is provided by concentrated absorption of X-ray quanta by the nanoscintillators and direct transfer of the absorbed energy to the pathological objects that are attached to the absorbing particles. Constructions of 3-D radiation detector matrices providing necessary microscopic spatial and angular resolutions of X-ray imaging are described on the basis of nanoscintillators, fiber light guides, and microcapillary matrices.


Subject(s)
Gamma Cameras , Nanotechnology/instrumentation , Radiographic Image Enhancement/instrumentation , Radiotherapy, Conformal/instrumentation , Scintillation Counting/instrumentation , Equipment Design , Radiographic Image Enhancement/methods , Radiotherapy, Conformal/methods
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