- Diffuse optical imaging
Diffuse optical imaging (DOI) or diffuse optical tomography (DOT) is a
medical imaging modality which uses nearinfrared light to generate images of the body. The technique is sensitive to theoptical absorption of some components of the body, such as oxy-hemoglobin and deoxy-hemoglobin.Typical applications include rapid 2D optical "
topographic " imaging of theEvent Related Optical Signal (EROS) orNear infrared spectroscopy (NIRS) signal following brain activity and "tomographic" reconstruction of an entire 3D volume of tissue to diagnosebreast cancer or neonatal brainhaemorrhage . The spatial resolution of DOT techniques is several millimeters, comparable to the lower end offunctional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI). The temporal resolution of EROS is very good, comparable toelectroencephalography , andmagnetoencephalography (~milliseconds), while that of NIRS, which measures hemodynamic changes rather than neuronal activity, is comparable to fMRI (~seconds). DOT instruments are relatively low cost ($150,000), portable and immune to electrical interference. The signal-to-noise ratio of NIRS is quite good, enabling detection of responses to single events in many cases. EROS signals are much weaker, typically requiring averaging of many responses.See also
*
Photon diffusion
*Ballistic imaging
*Photon diffusion equation External links
* [http://www.lrsm.upenn.edu/pmi Diffuse Optics Lab at University of Pennsylvania, Philadelphia]
* [http://www.nmr.mgh.harvard.edu/martinos/research/technologiesDOI.php DOI at Massachusetts General Hospital, Boston]
* [http://www-nml.dartmouth.edu/biomedprg/biomed.html Biomedical Imaging Group at Dartmouth]
* [http://www.iop.org/EJ/abstract/0031-9155/50/4/R01 A review article in the field by A.P. Gibson et al.]
* [http://medicalphysicsweb.org/cws/article/research/27299 An article on optical breast imaging]
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