Paper
14 January 2014 Confocal imaging through an endoscopic rod
Matt Galloway, Kayla Gabriel, George Dobre
Author Affiliations +
Abstract
Endoscopic rods (such as the Hopkins variety) are based on a tubular design containing a sequence of refractive optical structures1. They are intended to offer a wide angle of view but often at the expense of performance in terms of field curvature. They are used in areas of biomedicine that require visualisation of live tissue at the distal end, enabling clinicians to perform a variety of endoscopy procedures including biopsy.

Here we demonstrate a scanning confocal arrangement with the endoscopic rod used as an optical conduit, guiding the investigation beam to a resolution target placed at the distal end and guiding the backscattered light back to the detector.

The data presented in this study highlights the possible new contributions of this method to aid Optical Coherence Tomography (OCT) measurements in vivo and what could be expected of its application in terms of scanangle (field of view) and transmission performance.
© (2014) COPYRIGHT Society of Photo-Optical Instrumentation Engineers (SPIE). Downloading of the abstract is permitted for personal use only.
Matt Galloway, Kayla Gabriel, and George Dobre "Confocal imaging through an endoscopic rod", Proc. SPIE 8925, Fifth International Conference on Lasers in Medicine: Biotechnologies Integrated in Daily Medicine, 89250R (14 January 2014); https://doi.org/10.1117/12.2045582
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KEYWORDS
Endoscopes

Confocal microscopy

Endoscopy

Optical coherence tomography

Mirrors

Sensors

Visible radiation

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