Publication | Open Access
High speed, wide velocity dynamic range Doppler optical coherence tomography (Part V): Optimal utilization of multi-beam scanning for Doppler and speckle variance microvascular imaging
16
Citations
37
References
2017
Year
EngineeringAdvanced ImagingBiomedical EngineeringTissue ImagingBiomedical OpticVascular ImagingComputational ImagingDance ImagesRadiation ImagingRadiologyCardiovascular ImagingHealth SciencesUniform Doppler VarianceVascular ImageOphthalmologyMedical ImagingBiophotonicsUltrasoundMedical Image ComputingHigh SpeedOptical ImagingOptimal UtilizationPart VBiomedical ImagingOptical Coherence TomographyHuman SkinImagingSpeckle Variance Processing
In this paper, a multi-beam scanning technique is proposed to optimize the microvascular images of human skin obtained with Doppler effect based methods and speckle variance processing. Flow phantom experiments were performed to investigate the suitability for combining multi-beam data to achieve enhanced microvascular imaging. To our surprise, the highly variable spot sizes (ranging from 13 to 77 μm) encountered in high numerical aperture multi-beam OCT system imaging the same target provided reasonably uniform Doppler variance and speckle variance responses as functions of flow velocity, which formed the basis for combining them to obtain better microvascular imaging without scanning penalty. In vivo 2D and 3D imaging of human skin was then performed to further demonstrate the benefit of combining multi-beam scanning to obtain improved signal-to-noise ratio (SNR) in microvascular imaging. Such SNR improvement can be as high as 10 dB. To our knowledge, this is the first demonstration of combining different spot size, staggered multiple optical foci scanning, to achieve enhanced SNR for blood flow OCT imaging.
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