Presentation
20 August 2020 Biomedical diagnostics with multi-wavelength wide-field imaging Mueller polarimetry
Author Affiliations +
Abstract
We report the results of ex vivo studies of different types of human tissue (colon, uterine cervix, brain) with the custom-built multi-wavelength wide-field imaging Mueller polarimeter for medical diagnostics. Any type of pathology has impact on tissue microstructure at the very early stage of disease development. Consequently, it modifies optical properties of tissue. Apart from changing the scattering of light by tissue, disease progression also leads to the loss of tissue linear birefringence by breaking its fine fabric and erasing optical anisotropy. These structural changes can be detected early with polarized light by estimating the degree of depolarization of backscattered light, as well as the retardance of non-depolarized fraction of backscattered probing light beam. We demonstrate that polarization (scalar retardance and azimuth of optical axis) and depolarization parameters can serve as the optical markers of tissue pathology.
Conference Presentation
© (2020) COPYRIGHT Society of Photo-Optical Instrumentation Engineers (SPIE). Downloading of the abstract is permitted for personal use only.
Tatiana Novikova "Biomedical diagnostics with multi-wavelength wide-field imaging Mueller polarimetry", Proc. SPIE 11485, Reflection, Scattering, and Diffraction from Surfaces VII, 114850G (20 August 2020); https://doi.org/10.1117/12.2567960
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KEYWORDS
Tissue optics

Polarimetry

Diagnostics

Biomedical optics

Tissues

Light scattering

Optical properties

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