Publication | Closed Access
Application of circularly polarized light for non‐invasive diagnosis of cancerous tissues and turbid tissue‐like scattering media
248
Citations
12
References
2014
Year
Polarization‑based optical techniques are increasingly popular for biomedical diagnosis. The study exploits directional awareness of circularly/elliptically polarized light backscattered from turbid tissue‑like media and tracks the Stokes vector on the Poincaré sphere to assess its utility for distinguishing cancerous from non‑cancerous tissue in vitro. The authors illuminate samples with circularly/elliptically polarized laser light, record backscattered polarization with a polarimeter a few millimeters from the incidence point, track the Stokes vector on the Poincaré sphere, and analyze the data using a phenomenological model and an in‑house polarization‑tracking Monte Carlo simulation. The study shows that the Stokes vector of backscattered light on a Poincaré sphere can assess turbid tissue‑like media, with results interpreted via a phenomenological model and an in‑house polarization‑tracking Monte Carlo simulation. A schematic illustration of the experimental setup using circularly and elliptically polarized light to probe turbid tissue‑like media is provided.
Polarization‐based optical techniques have become increasingly popular in the field of biomedical diagnosis. In the current report we exploit the directional awareness of circularly and/or elliptically polarized light backscattered from turbid tissue‐like scattering media. We apply circularly and elliptically polarized laser light which illuminates the samples of interest, and a standard optical polarimeter is used to observe the polarization state of light backscattered a few millimeters away from the point of incidence. We demonstrate that the Stokes vector of backscattered light depicted on a Poincaré sphere can be used to assess a turbid tissue‐like scattering medium. By tracking the Stokes vector of the detected light on the Poincaré sphere, we investigate the utility of this approach for characterization of cancerous and non‐cancerous tissue samples in vitro . The obtained results are discussed in the framework of a phenomenological model and the results of a polarization tracking Monte Carlo model, developed in house. Schematic illustration of the experimental approach utilizing circularly and elliptically polarized light for probing turbid tissue‐like scattering media. magnified image Schematic illustration of the experimental approach utilizing circularly and elliptically polarized light for probing turbid tissue‐like scattering media.
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