Intrinsic spectrally-dependent background in spectroscopic visible-light optical coherence tomography.
Ian RubinoffRoman V KuranovHao F ZhangPublished in: Biomedical optics express (2020)
Visible-light optical coherence tomography (vis-OCT) has enabled new spectroscopic applications, such as retinal oximetry, as a result of increased optical absorption and scattering contacts in biological tissue and improved axial resolution. Besides extracting tissue properties from back-scattered light, spectroscopic analyses must consider spectral alterations induced by image reconstruction itself. We investigated an intrinsic spectral bias in the background noise floor, which is hereby referred to as the spectrally-dependent background (SDBG). We developed an analytical model to predict the SDBG-induced bias and validated this model using numerically simulated and experimentally acquired data. We found that SDBG systemically altered the measured spectra of blood in human retinal vessels in vis-OCT, as compared to literature data. We provided solutions to quantify and compensate for SDBG in retinal oximetry. This work is particularly significant for clinical applications of vis-OCT.
Keyphrases
- optical coherence tomography
- visible light
- molecular docking
- diabetic retinopathy
- optic nerve
- electronic health record
- endothelial cells
- big data
- high glucose
- systematic review
- high resolution
- air pollution
- deep learning
- induced pluripotent stem cells
- density functional theory
- magnetic resonance imaging
- single molecule