Intraoperative application of optical spectroscopy in the presence of blood Article

Lin, WC, Toms, SA, Jansen, ED et al. (2001). Intraoperative application of optical spectroscopy in the presence of blood . IEEE JOURNAL OF SELECTED TOPICS IN QUANTUM ELECTRONICS, 7(6), 996-1003. 10.1109/2944.983305

cited authors

  • Lin, WC; Toms, SA; Jansen, ED; Mahadevan-Jansen, A

authors

abstract

  • A simple but effective method of spectral processing was developed to minimize or remove the effects of the presence of superficial blood on tissue optical spectra and, hence, enhance the performance of optical-spectroscopic-based in vivo tissue diagnosis and surgical guidance. This spectral-processing algorithm was developed using the principles of absorption-induced light attenuation wherein the ratio of fluorescence intensity (F) and the hth power of diffuse reflectance intensity (Rd) at a given emission wavelength λm is immune to spectral distortions induced by the presence of blood on the tissue surface. Here, the exponent h is determined by the absorption coefficients of whole blood at the excitation and emission wavelengths. The theoretical basis of this spectral processing was verified using simulations and was experimentally validated. Furthermore, the optical spectra of brain tissues collected in vivo was processed using this algorithm to evaluate its impact on brain tissue differentiation using combined fluorescence and diffuse reflectance spectroscopy. Based on the simulation, as well as experimental results, it was observed that using F/Rdh can effectively reduce or remove spectral distortions induced by superficial blood contamination on tissue optical spectra. Thus, optical spectroscopy can also be used intraoperatively for applications such as surgical guidance of tumor resection.

publication date

  • November 1, 2001

Digital Object Identifier (DOI)

start page

  • 996

end page

  • 1003

volume

  • 7

issue

  • 6