Paper
21 February 2013 Determine scattering coefficient and anisotropy of scattering of murine tissues using reflectance-mode confocal microscopy
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Abstract
Different techniques have been developed to determine the optical properties of turbid media, which include collimated transmission, diffuse reflectance, adding-doubling and goniometry. While goniometry can be used to determine the anisotropy of scattering (g), other techniques are used to measure the absorption coefficient and reduced scattering coefficient (μs(1-g)). But separating scattering coefficient (μs) and anisotropy of scattering from reduced scattering coefficient has been tricky. We developed an algorithm to determine anisotropy of scattering from the depth dependent decay of reflectance-mode confocal scanning laser microscopy (rCSLM) data. This report presents the testing of the algorithm on tissue phantoms with different anisotropies (g = 0.127 to 0.868, at 488 nm wavelength). Tissue phantoms were made from polystyrene microspheres (6 sizes 0.1-0.5 μm dia.) dispersed in both aqueous solutions and agarose gels. Three dimensional images were captured. The rCSLM-signal followed an exponential decay as a function of depth of the focal volume, R(z)ρexp(-μz) where ρ (dimensionless, ρ = 1 for a mirror) is the local reflectivity and μ [cm-1] is the exponential decay constant. The theory was developed to uniquely map the experimentally determined μ and ρ into the optical scattering properties μs and g. The values of μs and g depend on the composition and microstructure of tissues, and allow characterization of a tissue.
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Ravikant Samatham and Steven L. Jacques "Determine scattering coefficient and anisotropy of scattering of murine tissues using reflectance-mode confocal microscopy", Proc. SPIE 8592, Biomedical Applications of Light Scattering VII, 85920U (21 February 2013); https://doi.org/10.1117/12.2005072
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Cited by 4 scholarly publications.
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KEYWORDS
Tissues

Scattering

Laser scattering

Optical properties

Anisotropy

Tissue optics

Confocal microscopy

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