.
Significance:
The optical properties of biological samples provide information about the structural characteristics of the tissue and any changes arising from pathological conditions. Optical coherence tomography (OCT) has proven to be capable of extracting tissue’s optical properties using a model that combines the exponential decay due to tissue scattering and the axial point spread function that arises from the confocal nature of the detection system, particularly for higher numerical aperture (NA) measurements. A weakness in estimating the optical properties is the inter-parameter cross-talk between tissue scattering and the confocal parameters defined by the Rayleigh range and the focus depth.
Aim:
In this study, we develop a systematic method to improve the characterization of optical properties with high-NA OCT.
Approach:
We developed a method that spatially parameterizes the confocal parameters in a previously established model for estimating the optical properties from the depth profiles of high-NA OCT.
Results:
The proposed parametrization model was first evaluated on a set of intralipid phantoms and then validated using a low-NA objective in which cross-talk from the confocal parameters is negligible. We then utilize our spatially parameterized model to characterize optical property changes introduced by a tissue index matching process using a simple immersion agent, 2,2’-thiodiethonal.
Conclusions:
Our approach improves the confidence of parameter estimation by reducing the degrees of freedom in the non-linear fitting model.
The importance of polarization-sensitive optical coherence tomography
(PS-OCT) has been increasingly recognized in human brain imaging.
Despite the recent progress of PS-OCT in revealing white matter
architecture and orientation, quantification of fine-scale fiber
tracts in the human brain cortex has been a challenging problem, due
to a low birefringence in the gray matter. In this study, we
investigated the effect of refractive index matching by
2,2’-thiodiethanol (TDE) immersion on the improvement of PS-OCT
measurements in ex vivo human brain tissue. We show
that we can obtain fiber orientation maps of U-fibers that underlie
sulci, as well as cortical fibers in the gray matter, including radial
fibers in gyri and distinct layers of fibers exhibiting laminar
organization. Further analysis shows that index matching reduces the
noise in axis orientation measurements by 56% and 39%,
in white and gray matter, respectively. Index matching also enables
precise measurements of apparent birefringence, which was
underestimated in the white matter by 82% but overestimated in
the gray matter by 16% prior to TDE immersion. Mathematical
simulations show that the improvements are primarily attributed to the
reduction in the tissue scattering coefficient, leading to an enhanced
signal-to-noise ratio in deeper tissue regions, which could not be
achieved by conventional noise reduction methods.
Optical coherence tomography (OCT) is an emerging 3D imaging technique that allows quantification of intrinsic optical properties such as scattering coefficient and back-scattering coefficient, and has proved useful in distinguishing delicate microstructures in the human brain. The origins of scattering in brain tissues are contributed by the myelin content, neuron size and density primarily; however, no quantitative relationships between them have been reported, which hampers the use of OCT in fundamental studies of architectonic areas in the human brain and the pathological evaluations of diseases. Here, we built a generalized linear model based on Mie scattering theory that quantitatively links tissue scattering to myelin content and neuron density in the human brain. We report a strong linear relationship between scattering coefficient and the myelin content that is retained across different regions of the brain. Neuronal cell body turns out to be a secondary contribution to the overall scattering. The optical property of OCT provides a label-free solution for quantifying volumetric myelin content and neuron cells in the human brain.
Cells are not uniformly distributed in the human cerebral cortex. Rather, they are arranged in a regional and laminar fashion that span a range of scales. Here we demonstrate an innovative imaging and analysis pipeline to construct a reliable cell census across the human cerebral cortex. Magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) is used to establish a macroscopic reference coordinate system of laminar and cytoarchitectural boundaries. Cell counting is obtained with both traditional immunohistochemistry, to provide a stereological gold-standard, and with a custom-made inverted confocal light-sheet fluorescence microscope (LSFM) for 3D imaging at cellular resolution. Finally, mesoscale optical coherence tomography (OCT) enables the registration of the distorted histological cell typing obtained with LSFM to the MRI-based atlas coordinate system.
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