Optical properties of mice's stool in 550 to 1000 nm wavelength range.
Helene IslerCatherine GermanierLinda AhnenJingjing JiangScott LindnerAldo Di Costanzo MataTanja KarenSalvador Sánchez MajosMartin WolfAlexander KalyanovPublished in: Journal of biophotonics (2017)
The aim of this work was to measure optical properties of stool of mice to provide this relevant wavelength-dependent behavior for optical imaging modalities such as fluorescent molecular tomography and near-infrared optical tomography. BALB/c nude female mice were studied and optical properties of the stool were determined by employing the inverse adding-doubling approach. The animals were kept on chlorophyll-free diet. Nine stool samples were measured. The wavelength-dependent behavior of absorption and scattering in 550 to 1000 nm range is presented. The reduced scattering spectrum is fitted to the Mie scattering approximation in the near-infrared (NIR) wavelength range and to the Mie + Rayleigh approximation in visible/NIR range with the fitting coefficients presented. The study revealed that the absorption spectrum of stool can lead to crosstalk with the spectrum of hemoglobin in the NIR range.