Angle correction for small animal tumor imaging with spatial frequency domain imaging (SFDI)

Biomed Opt Express. 2016 May 24;7(6):2373-84. doi: 10.1364/BOE.7.002373. eCollection 2016 Jun 1.

Abstract

Spatial frequency domain imaging (SFDI) is a widefield imaging technique that allows for the quantitative extraction of tissue optical properties. SFDI is currently being explored for small animal tumor imaging, but severe imaging artifacts occur for highly curved surfaces (e.g. the tumor edge). We propose a modified Lambertian angle correction, adapted from the Minnaert correction method for satellite imagery, to account for tissue surface angles up to 75°. The method was tested in a hemisphere phantom study as well as a small animal tumor model. The proposed method reduced µa and µs` extraction errors by an average of 64% and 16% respectively compared to performing no angle correction, and provided more physiologically agreeable optical property and chromophore values on tumors.

Keywords: (170.0110) Imaging systems; (170.3880) Medical and biological imaging; (170.5280) Photon migration; (290.1990) Diffusion.