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Method for tissue clearing: temporal tissue optical clearing.

Behnam Shariati B KSeyyede Sarvenaz KhatamiMohammad Ali AnsariFazel JahangiriHamid LatifiValery Victorovich Tuchin
Published in: Biomedical optics express (2022)
Light absorption and scattering in biological tissue are significant variables in optical imaging technologies and regulating them enhances optical imaging quality. Optical clearing methods can decrease light scattering and improve optical imaging quality to some extent but owing to their limited efficacy and the potential influence of optical clearing agents on tissue functioning, complementing approaches must be investigated. In this paper, a new strategy of optical clearing proposed as time-dependent or temporal tissue optical clearing (TTOC) is described. The absorption and scattering in light interaction with tissue are regulated in the TTOC technique by altering the pulse width. Here, the dependence of optical properties of matter on the pulse width in a gelatin-based phantom was investigated experimentally. Then, a semi-classical model was introduced to computationally study of Ultra-short laser/matter interaction. After studying phantom, the absorption and scattering probabilities in the interaction of the pulse with modeled human skin tissue were investigated using the proposed model for pulse widths ranging from 1µs to 10fs. The propagation of the pulse through the skin tissue was simulated using the Monte Carlo technique by computing the pulse width-dependent optical properties (absorption coefficient µ a , scattering coefficient µ s , and anisotropy factor g). Finally, the penetration depth of light into the tissue and reflectance for different pulse widths was found.
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