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Speckle-modulating optical coherence tomography in living mice and humans.

Nature communications (2017-06-21)
Orly Liba, Matthew D Lew, Elliott D SoRelle, Rebecca Dutta, Debasish Sen, Darius M Moshfeghi, Steven Chu, Adam de la Zerda
RÉSUMÉ

Optical coherence tomography (OCT) is a powerful biomedical imaging technology that relies on the coherent detection of backscattered light to image tissue morphology in vivo. As a consequence, OCT is susceptible to coherent noise (speckle noise), which imposes significant limitations on its diagnostic capabilities. Here we show speckle-modulating OCT (SM-OCT), a method based purely on light manipulation that virtually eliminates speckle noise originating from a sample. SM-OCT accomplishes this by creating and averaging an unlimited number of scans with uncorrelated speckle patterns without compromising spatial resolution. Using SM-OCT, we reveal small structures in the tissues of living animals, such as the inner stromal structure of a live mouse cornea, the fine structures inside the mouse pinna, and sweat ducts and Meissner's corpuscle in the human fingertip skin-features that are otherwise obscured by speckle noise when using conventional OCT or OCT with current state of the art speckle reduction methods.

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Oxyde de titane(IV), anatase, powder, 99.8% trace metals basis