Concepedia

Publication | Open Access

Noninvasive, in vivo rodent brain optical coherence tomography at 21  microns

13

Citations

13

References

2019

Year

Abstract

In biological tissue, longer near-infrared wavelengths generally experience less scattering and more water absorption. Here we demonstrate an optical coherence tomography (OCT) system centered at 2.1 microns, whose bandwidth falls in the 2.2 micron water absorption optical window, for in vivo imaging of the rodent brain. We show in vivo that at 2.1 microns, the OCT signal is actually attenuated less in cranial bone than at 1.3 microns, and is also less susceptible to multiple scattering tails. We also show that the 2.2 micron window enables direct spectroscopic OCT assessment of tissue water content. We conclude that with further optimization, 2.2 micron OCT will have advantages in low-water-content tissue such as bone, as well as applications where extensive averaging is possible to compensate absorption losses.

References

YearCitations

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