Open Access
1 February 2024 Ultra-miniature dual-wavelength spatial frequency domain imaging for micro-endoscopy
Jane Crowley, George S. D. Gordon
Author Affiliations +
Abstract

Significance

There is a need for a cost-effective, quantitative imaging tool that can be deployed endoscopically to better detect early stage gastrointestinal cancers. Spatial frequency domain imaging (SFDI) is a low-cost imaging technique that produces near-real time, quantitative maps of absorption and reduced scattering coefficients, but most implementations are bulky and suitable only for use outside the body.

Aim

We aim to develop an ultra-miniature SFDI system comprising an optical fiber array (diameter 0.125 mm) and a micro camera (1×1 mm package) to displace conventionally bulky components, in particular, the projector.

Approach

First, we fabricated a prototype with an outer diameter of 3 mm, although the individual component dimensions could permit future packaging to a <1.5 mm diameter. We developed a phase-tracking algorithm to rapidly extract images with fringe projections at three equispaced phase shifts to perform SFDI demodulation.

Results

To validate the performance, we first demonstrate comparable recovery of quantitative optical properties between our ultra-miniature system and a conventional bench-top SFDI system with an agreement of 15% and 6% for absorption and reduced scattering, respectively. Next, we demonstrate imaging of absorption and reduced scattering of tissue-mimicking phantoms providing enhanced contrast between simulated tissue types (healthy and tumour), done simultaneously at wavelengths of 515 and 660 nm. Using a support vector machine classifier, we estimate that sensitivity and specificity values of >90% are feasible for detecting simulated squamous cell carcinoma.

Conclusions

This device shows promise as a cost-effective, quantitative imaging tool to detect variations in optical absorption and scattering as indicators of cancer.

CC BY: © The Authors. Published by SPIE under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License. Distribution or reproduction of this work in whole or in part requires full attribution of the original publication, including its DOI.
Jane Crowley and George S. D. Gordon "Ultra-miniature dual-wavelength spatial frequency domain imaging for micro-endoscopy," Journal of Biomedical Optics 29(2), 026002 (1 February 2024). https://doi.org/10.1117/1.JBO.29.2.026002
Received: 7 June 2023; Accepted: 14 November 2023; Published: 1 February 2024
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KEYWORDS
Optical properties

Absorption

Scattering

Tissues

Cameras

Spatial frequencies

Imaging systems

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