Paper
1 July 1990 Video pixel spectrometer for diagnostic imaging
Donald R. Ouimette, Sol Nudelman, Scott Zaccheo, Thomas Spackman
Author Affiliations +
Abstract
There has been much evidence to suggest that diseased tissue is spectrally different from healthy tissue. Clinical endoscopy often results in fairly accurate diagnosis based on observed spectra (color), texture, and shapes of lesions. Conventional spectrometers lack the ability to coordinate adequate sampling of diseased verses healthy tissue to make a practical analytical tool. A video pixel spectrometer was developed which captures the spectra of a complete line of pixels within an image simultaneously. A color image of the suspicious tissue is continuously displayed which identifies a line through the image. This line represents the line of pixels which pass in to the spectrometer and is usually positioned to pass through the lesions. The spectrometer output spectrally disperses every pixel along the line simultaneously, resulting in the capture of the spectra of hundreds of pixels within the lesion and the surrounding tissue. The data can then be processed and correlated with shape and texture data for statistical classification of benign verses healthy tissue. This instrument was designed to couple to a variety of medical imaging instruments such as endoscopes, fundus cameras, macroscopic optics for dermatology, and microscopes.
© (1990) COPYRIGHT Society of Photo-Optical Instrumentation Engineers (SPIE). Downloading of the abstract is permitted for personal use only.
Donald R. Ouimette, Sol Nudelman, Scott Zaccheo, and Thomas Spackman "Video pixel spectrometer for diagnostic imaging", Proc. SPIE 1231, Medical Imaging IV: Image Formation, (1 July 1990); https://doi.org/10.1117/12.18788
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KEYWORDS
Spectroscopy

Reflectivity

Tissues

Cameras

Video

Endoscopes

Image intensifiers

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