RSS Feed: TS-Si News Service. RSS Feed: TS-Si Research Service. TS-Si Reader Comments. Delicious: TS-Si News Service. Digg: TS-Si News Service.
Pinterest.
StumbleUpon. Facebook: TS-Si News Service.
GooglePlus: TS-Si News Service.
Twitter: Follow TS-Si News Service.

TS-Si is dedicated to the acceptance, medical treatment, and legal protection of individuals correcting the misalignment of their brains and their anatomical sex, while supporting their transition into society as hormonally reconstituted and surgically corrected citizens.
TS-Si supports open access to publicly funded research.

Leave a comment.
Focused Light Probes Deep Inside Biological Tissue Print E-mail
SciMed - Biology
TS-Si News Service   
Wednesday, 27 June 2012 09:00
Seeing Inside Tissue.Pasadena, CA, USA. Focused light enables a potential range of deep-tissue imaging applications in biomedical research, medical diagnostics and incision-less surgery.

Researchers now can use a method that focuses light efficiently inside biological tissue. Previously, light could be focused only about one millimeter deep, but the new limit is now two and a half millimeters. In principle, the technique could probe as much as a few inches into tissue.


By increasing the power of light, it might be possible to do away with a traditional scalpel, enabling incision-less surgery. Changhuei Yang, a professor of electrical engineering and bioengineering at the California Institute of Technology (Caltech) is a senior author on the new study. "By generating a tight laser-focus spot deep in tissue, we can potentially use that as a laser scalpel that leaves the skin unharmed." Even surgeries like organ amputation, transplantation and reconstruction traditionally can entail other procedures that require invasive incisions, with potential benefits from the new method.

Researchers from Caltech were able to focus light deep inside biological tissue. The researchers shined green laser light into the tissue sample, as seen in the lead image to this article. This image shows how the technique works. Left: Light enters the tissue sample and is scattered (blue arrows). From above, ultrasound is focused into a small area inside the tissue. The ultrasound shifts the frequency of any light that passed through that area ever so slightly, changing its color. The color-shifted light (green) is then recorded. Right: The recorded light is sent back to retrace its steps to the small region where the ultrasound was focused -- which means the light itself is focused on that area. Image courtesy of Ying Min Wang and Benjamin Judkewitz at Caltech.
Click Pic for Details

How the Technique Works. Researchers from the California Institute of Technology (Caltech) were able to focus light deep inside biological tissue.

The researchers shined green laser light into the tissue sample, as seen in the lead image that introduced this article. This image shows how the technique works.
Ying Min Wang, a graduate student in electrical engineering, and Benjamin Judkewitz, a postdoctoral scholar, are the lead authors on the paper, which was published in the journal Nature Communications. The new work builds on a previous technique that Changhuei Yang and his colleagues developed to see through a layer of biological tissue, which is opaque because it scatters light.

In the previous work, the researchers shined light through the tissue and then recorded the resulting scattered light on a holographic plate. The recording contained all the information about how the light beam scattered, zigzagging through the tissue. By playing the recording in reverse, the researchers were able to essentially send the light back through to the other side of the tissue, retracing its path to the original source. In this way, they could send light through a layer of tissue without the blurring effect of scattering.

But to make images of what is inside tissue — to get a picture of cells or molecules that are embedded inside, say, a muscle — the researchers would have to be able to focus a light beam into the tissue. "For biologists, it's most important to know what's happening inside the tissue," Wang says.

To focus light into tissue, the researchers expanded on the recent work of Lihong Wang's group at the Washington University in St. Louis (WUSTL). They had developed a method to focus light using the high-frequency vibrations of ultrasound, raking advantage of two properties of ultrasound.
  • First, the high-frequency sound waves are not scattered by tissue, which is why it is effective for taking images of fetuses in utero.

  • Second, ultrasonic vibrations interact with light in such a way that they slightly shift the light's frequency. As a result of this so-called acousto-optic effect, any light that has interacted with ultrasound changes into a slightly different color.

In both the WUSTL and Caltech experiments, the teams focused ultrasound waves into a small region inside a tissue sample. They then shined light into the sample, which, in turn, scattered the light. Because of the acousto-optic effect, any of the scattered light that passes through the region with the focused ultrasound will change to a slightly different color. The researchers can pick out this color-shifted light and record it.

By employing the same playback technique as in the earlier Caltech work, they then send the light back, having only the color-shifted bits retrace their path to the small region where the ultrasound was focused — which means that the light itself is focused on that area, allowing an image to be created. The researchers can control where they want to focus the light simply by moving the ultrasound focus.

The WUSTL experiment was limited, however, because only a very small amount of light could be focused. The Caltech engineers' new method, on the other hand, allows them to fire a beam of light with as much power as they want — which is essential for potential applications.

The team demonstrated how the new method could be used with fluorescence imaging — a powerful technique used in a wide range of biological and biomedical research.
  • The researchers embedded a patch of gel with a fluorescent pattern that spelled out "CIT" inside a tissue sample.

  • Then, they scanned the sample with focused light beams. The focused light hit and excited the fluorescent pattern, resulting in the glowing letters "CIT" emanating from inside the tissue.

  • The team also demonstrated their technique by taking images of tumors tagged with fluorescent dyes.

"This demonstration that we can focus significant optical power deep within tissues opens up significant possibilities in optical imaging," Yang says. By tagging cells or molecules that are markers for disease with fluorescent dyes, doctors can use this technique to make diagnoses noninvasively, much as if they were doing an ultrasound procedure.

Doctors might also use this process to treat cancer with photodynamic therapy. In this procedure, a drug that contains light-sensitive, cancer-killing compounds is injected into a patient. Cancer cells absorb those compounds preferentially, so that the compounds kill the cells when light shines on them. Photodynamic therapy is now only used at tissue surfaces, because of the way light is easily scattered. The new technique should allow doctors to reach cancer cells deeper inside tissue.

The team has been able to more than double the current limit for how far light can be focused into tissue. With future improvements on the optoelectronic hardware used to record and play back light, the engineers say, they may be able to reach 10 centimeters (almost 4 inches) — the depth limit of ultrasound — within a few years.

Still, the researchers say, their demonstration shows they have overcome the main conceptual hurdle for effectively focusing light deep inside tissue. "This is a big breakthrough, and we're excited about the potential," Judkewitz says. Adds Caltech's Wang, "It's a very new way to image into tissue, which could lead to a lot of promising applications."

ParticipationIn addition to Wang, Judkewitz, and Yang, the other author on the paper is Charles DiMarzio of Northeastern University.
CitationDeep-tissue focal fluorescence imaging with digitally time-reversed ultrasound-encoded light. Ying Min Wang, Benjamin Judkewitz, Charles A. DiMarzio, Changhuei Yang. Nature Communications 2012; 3:928. doi:10.1038/ncomms1925
Download PDF
Abstract

Fluorescence imaging is one of the most important research tools in biomedical sciences. However, scattering of light severely impedes imaging of thick biological samples beyond the ballistic regime. Here we directly show focusing and high-resolution fluorescence imaging deep inside biological tissues by digitally time-reversing ultrasound-tagged light with high optical gain (~5×105). We confirm the presence of a time-reversed optical focus along with a diffuse background — a corollary of partial phase conjugation — and develop an approach for dynamic background cancellation. To illustrate the potential of our method, we image complex fluorescent objects and tumour microtissues at an unprecedented depth of 2.5 mm in biological tissues at a lateral resolution of 36 µm×52 µm and an axial resolution of 657 µm. Our results set the stage for a range of deep-tissue imaging applications in biomedical research and medical diagnostics.

Subject terms: Physical sciences, Applied physics, Optical physics.

TS-Si News Service.The TS-Si News Service is a collaborative effort by TS-Si.org editors, contributors, and corresponding institutions. Sources can include the cited individuals and organizations, as well as TS-Si.org staff contributions. Articles and news reports do not necessarily convey official positions of TS-Si, its partners, or affiliates. We welcome your comments. Use the form below to leave a public comment or send private correspondence via the TS-Si Contact Page. We will not divulge any personal details or place you on a mailing list without your permission.


TS-Si is dedicated to the acceptance, medical treatment, and legal protection of individuals correcting the misalignment of their brains and their anatomical sex, while supporting their transition into society as hormonally reconstituted and surgically corrected citizens.


Last Updated on Wednesday, 27 June 2012 09:03
 

Add comment

TS-Si often publishes material that presents challenges and insights worthy of extended discussion. We encourage lively, open debate and ask that you show respect for others with responsible comments. This can be done with emotional maturity and intelligence. Before commenting, please thoroughly read the article and other comments, then stay on topic. Address the issues without presumptions about the author(s) or other persons.

We will remove any comment that is a personal attack or off-topic, abusive, exceptionally incoherent, libelous, mysogonist, obscene, phobic, profane, racist, or otherwise inappropriate. Removal for cause may occur without prior notice and repeat offenders may lose commenting privileges. These abuses and/or any attempt to post a solicitations and/or advertising, flood, spam, or otherwise disrupt TS-Si.org operations are subject to further sanctions.

All comments are subject to our terms of use and overall site policies, available under the About menu tab.


Security code
Refresh