Dynamic contrast in scanning microscopic OCT

While optical coherence tomography (OCT) provides a resolution down to 1 µm, it has difficulties in visualizing cellular structures due to a lack of scattering contrast. By evaluating signal fluctuations, a significant contrast enhancement was demonstrated using time-domain full-field OCT (FF-OCT),...

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Veröffentlicht in:Optics letters 2020-09, Vol.45 (17), p.4766-4769
Hauptverfasser: Münter, Michael, vom Endt, Malte, Pieper, Mario, Casper, Malte, Ahrens, Martin, Kohlfaerber, Tabea, Rahmanzadeh, Ramtin, König, Peter, Hüttmann, Gereon, Schulz-Hildebrandt, Hinnerk
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:While optical coherence tomography (OCT) provides a resolution down to 1 µm, it has difficulties in visualizing cellular structures due to a lack of scattering contrast. By evaluating signal fluctuations, a significant contrast enhancement was demonstrated using time-domain full-field OCT (FF-OCT), which makes cellular and subcellular structures visible. The putative cause of the dynamic OCT signal is the site-dependent active motion of cellular structures in a sub-micrometer range, which provides histology-like contrast. Here we demonstrate dynamic contrast with a scanning frequency-domain OCT (FD-OCT), which we believe has crucial advantages. Given the inherent sectional imaging geometry, scanning FD-OCT provides depth-resolved images across tissue layers, a perspective known from histopathology, much faster and more efficiently than FF-OCT. Both shorter acquisition times and tomographic depth-sectioning reduce the sensitivity of dynamic contrast for bulk tissue motion artifacts and simplify their correction in post-processing. Dynamic contrast makes microscopic FD-OCT a promising tool for the histological analysis of unstained tissues.
ISSN:0146-9592
1539-4794
DOI:10.1364/OL.396134