Calibration-free absolute quantification of oxygen saturation based on the dynamics of photoacoustic signals

J Xia, A Danielli, Y Liu, L Wang, K Maslov, L. V Wang

Research output: Chapter in Book/Report/Conference proceedingConference contributionpeer-review

Abstract

Photoacoustic tomography (PAT) is a hybrid imaging technique that has broad preclinical and clinical applications. Based on the photoacoustic effect, PAT directly measures specific optical absorption, which is the product of the tissue-intrinsic optical absorption coefficient and the local optical fluence. Therefore, quantitative PAT, such as absolute oxygen saturation (sO2) quantification, requires knowledge of the local optical fluence, which can only be estimated through invasive measurements or sophisticated modeling of light transportation. In this Letter, we circumvent this requirement by taking advantage of the dynamics in sO2. The new method works when the sO2 transition can be simultaneously monitored with multiple wavelengths. For each wavelength, the ratio of photoacoustic amplitudes measured at different sO2 states is utilized. Using the ratio cancels the contribution from optical fluence and allows calibration-free quantification of absolute sO2. The new method was validated through both phantom and in vivo experiments.
Original languageAmerican English
Title of host publicationBiomedical Optics
PublisherSPIE Photonics West
StatePublished - 2013

Bibliographical note

Place of conference:USA

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