The present invention relates to acoustic-optical imaging methods and systems.
More particularly, the invention relates to an acoustic-optical imaging method for imaging an observation area of a medium. Such a method is intended to obtain information in a non-invasive manner about the optical properties of an observation area located deep within a medium, such as biological tissue. For example, the optical properties may be a color, an absorption, or a structure of the biological tissue of the observation area. The observation area is for example located several millimeters or centimeters deep within an object, for example within a body, an organ, or an object.
Such methods are known, in which an ultrasonic acoustic wave focused on a focal spot in the observation area is generated in the observation area of the medium, and a light wave is simultaneously emitted in this same area. Information is then obtained by detecting a signal related to the link between the light wave and the acoustic vibration in the medium. Indeed, when an ultrasonic wave of acoustic frequency fa travels through a scattering medium (for example biological or other tissue), it causes a periodic displacement of the scatterers and a periodic modulation of the refractive index of the medium. If an incident light wave, in particular a laser wave, of incident frequency fi is scattered by the medium, the movement of the scatterers and the modulation of the refractive index of the medium generate a marked light wave comprising a carrier component at the incident frequency fi, and an acoustic-optical component scattered to one or the other of the acoustic sidebands of frequency fao=fa±n*fi.
Such methods are described in “Ultrasound-mediated optical tomography: a review of current methods” by Daniel S. Elson, Rug. Li, Christopher Dunsby, Robert Eckersley, and Meng-Xing Tang, published in Interface Focus (2011) vol. 1, pages 632-648.
In these known methods, one then obtains information about the medium by determining the weight of the acoustic-optical component relative to the carrier component. Furthermore, as the marked light wave comes from the focal spot of the ultrasonic wave, it is therefore possible to obtain information on the local light intensity in the scattering medium. In these methods, an image of the light intensity within the observation area is then formed, line by line, by sweeping the observation area with a series of focused ultrasonic waves.
These known methods have the disadvantage of requiring the emission of a large number of ultrasonic waves in order to obtain an image of the observation area, and are therefore slow. Furthermore, the signal-to-noise ratio is low and requires a large number of acquisitions at the same focal point to enable averaging them and obtaining a usable signal.
To this end, a first object of the invention is an acoustic-optical imaging method for imaging an observation area of a medium, the method comprising
In preferred embodiments of the invention, use may possibly be made of one or more of the following provisions:
each non-focused acoustic wave being generated during a measurement operation f the plurality of measurement operations, the measurement signal associated with said non-focused acoustic wave being acquired during said measurement operation;
determining a plurality of profile slices associated with at least one measurement signal, each profile slice being a function of a one-dimensional Fourier transform of an associated measurement signal,
determining a two-dimensional spectrum from the plurality of profile slices, and
determining at least one value representative of a light intensity in the observation area, said representative value being a function of a two-dimensional inverse Fourier transform of the two-dimensional spectrum;
The invention also relates to an acoustic-optical imaging system for imaging an observation area of a medium, the system comprising
the acquisition device comprising:
a transducer array for generating, in the observation area, at least one non-focused acoustic wave propagating in a propagation direction,
a light-emitting device for emitting at least one incident light wave in the observation area, in order to generate at least one marked light wave comprising at least one acoustic-optical component shifted in frequency by said at least one non-focused acoustic wave,
a detector for acquiring at least one measurement signal representative of said at least one marked light wave; and
Other features and advantages of the invention will be apparent from the following description of several of its embodiments given by way of non-limiting examples, with reference to the accompanying drawings.
In the drawings:
In the various figures, the same references designate identical or similar elements.
A medium 2 to be imaged is provided, for example an object or a biological tissue, therefore comprising an observation area 3. The observation area 3 may be on the surface of the medium 2 but may also be deep within the medium 2, for example several centimeters deep.
The medium 2 is a scattering medium. “Scattering medium” is understood to mean that beyond a typical thickness 1* (mean free path of transport), for example about a millimeter in biological media, information contained in a light wave traveling through the medium is completely scrambled and impossible to interpret without processing. This therefore renders conventional optical imaging impossible at depth. This phenomenon is also called multiple light scattering.
An acoustic transducer array 4 is in acoustic contact with the medium 2, either in direct contact, or for example acoustically coupled to the medium 2 by means of a coupling element such as a tank or a cushion filled with water.
The acoustic transducer array 4 is for example a linear array comprising for example several tens of transducers 5 (for example from 100 to 300). The transducers 5 are for example juxtaposed along an axis X. In alternative embodiments, the transducers 5 could be arranged to follow a curve, or arranged to form a two-dimensional array.
The acoustic transducer array 4 is controlled by control means which comprise for example an electronic rack 6 and a microcomputer 7 controlling the rack 6.
The acoustic transducer array 4 is thus able to generate, in the observation area 3, a non-focused acoustic wave propagating in a predefined propagation direction. The propagation direction can be controlled so as to generate, in the observation area 3, non-focused acoustic waves propagating in various propagation directions.
Without limitation, the acoustic transducer array 4 is for example capable of generating in the observation area 3 an ultrasonic wave having a central frequency of around a few megahertz, for example 8 MHz. The acoustic transducer array 4 is for example capable of generating in the observation area 3 a plurality of ultrasonic waves having selected propagation directions within a circular sector having a central angle greater than 30 degrees, for example 40 degrees.
In one embodiment of the invention, the non-focused acoustic waves are acoustic plane waves. In another embodiment, the non-focused acoustic waves are acoustic divergent waves.
The system 1 also comprises a light-emitting device 8. The light-emitting device 8 is capable of emitting, in the observation area 3, at least one incident light wave. In particular, the light-emitting device 8 is adapted to emit said light wave simultaneously with the emission of an ultrasonic wave by the acoustic transducer array 4. The light-emitting device 8 is for example a laser, or in general an emitting device which enables controlling the spectrum of the emitted incident light wave.
“Light wave” is understood in the broader sense, meaning electromagnetic radiation capable of propagating in the medium 2. In particular, it can be understood to mean electromagnetic radiation within the infrared, visible, or ultraviolet spectrum.
In an example provided by way of illustration and without limitation, the light-emitting device 8 is a single-frequency semiconductor laser amplified to 2 watts and 780 nanometers in wavelength (which therefore corresponds to an incident frequency fi). The polarization of the incident light wave can also be controlled. In some embodiments, the light wave may be temporally and spatially modulated or filtered before entering the medium 2.
The system 1 further comprises a detector 9 capable. of acquiring measurement signals representative of the marked light waves. The detector 9 is thus a photodetector sensitive to one or more electromagnetic wavelengths corresponding to wavelengths of the marked light wave. For example, the detector 9 is sensitive to an acoustic-optical component generated by an interaction between an incident light wave and a non-focused acoustic wave propagating in the observation area. The detector 9 may also be sensitive to a carrier component, meaning a component of the marked light wave at the incident frequency fi.
The detector 9 is for example a photodiode.
The system 1 may contain elements for pre-processing or post-processing the signal 10, possibly integrated into the detector 9. The elements for post-processing the signal 10 may for example include a high-pass filter 10a, a broadband amplifier 10b (for example Thorlabs, DHPVA), and an analog-to-digital converter 10c.
Thus in particular, the measurement signal can be sampled by the analog-to-digital converter 10e at a frequency greater than a few MHz, preferably greater than 10 megahertz, for example a sampling frequency of 40 MHz.
In this manner, each measurement Signal may in particular comprise a time series of light intensity values of an acoustic-optical component of a marked light wave shifted in frequency by a non-focused acoustic wave.
The transducer array 4, the light-emitting device 8, and the detector 9 may thus form an acquisition device 11 of a system 1 according to the invention. Such an acquisition device 11 is particularly suitable for acquiring a plurality of measurement signals associated with a plurality of non-focused acoustic waves, as will be detailed further below.
Finally, the system 1 according to the invention also comprises a processing device 12, adapted to determine at least one value representative of a light intensity in the observation area 3 based on the plurality of measurement signals acquired by the acquisition device 11.
An acoustic-optical imaging method for imaging an observation area of a medium is illustrated in more detail in
During an acquisition step 100, a plurality of measurement signals S associated with a plurality of non-focused acoustic waves can be acquired.
Such an acquisition step 100 may include at least one measurement operation 150, enabling the acquisition of a measurement signal S associated with a non-focused acoustic wave, and in particular with a propagation direction of a non-focused acoustic wave θ.
Advantageously, the acquisition step 100 may include a plurality of measurement operations 150 so as to acquire a plurality of measurement signals (S) associated with a plurality of non-focused acoustic waves.
Thus, during each measurement operation 150:
In particular, the plurality of measurement operations 150 of the acquisition step 100 may be such that the non-focused acoustic waves of the plurality of non-focused acoustic waves propagate in non-collinear propagation directions.
More specifically, the propagation directions θ of the plurality of non-focused acoustic waves may cover a circular sector having a central angle greater than 30 degrees. The circular sector May have a central angle greater than 60 degrees or 90 degrees, or even close to 180 degrees.
In one embodiment, the propagation directions θ of the plurality of non-focused acoustic waves are separated from each other by an angular spacing greater than 0.25 degrees, preferably greater than 0.5 degrees.
Moreover, the propagation directions θ of the plurality of non-focused acoustic waves may be separated by an angular spacing of less than 45 degrees, preferably less than 20 degrees.
Thus by way of non-limiting example, the acquisition step 100 may include the emission of plane waves in forty-one different propagation directions θ, said propagation directions having propagation angles between −20° and 20° relative to a direction Z normal to the transducer array 4, spaced apart by 1°. The plane waves may be emitted for example by a “Aixplorer” system from the company Supersonic Imagine.
In one embodiment of the invention, a measurement operation 150 in a propagation direction can be repeated n times to acquire n measurement signals S associated with a propagation direction θ of a non-focused acoustic wave. The measurement operation 150 may for example be repeated a number n of times greater than ten, for example one hundred times or one thousand times.
Such a repetition of the measurement operation 150 allows averaging together said n measurement signals so as to determine a measurement signal S to be used for the subsequent processing step. Such a measurement signal offers the advantage of having a higher signal-to-noise ratio.
The method next comprises a processing step 200 during which at least one value representative of a light intensity in the observation area is determined from the plurality of measurement signals.
Without limitation, this processing step 200 advantageously comprises the implementation of a Radon transform as illustrated in
Schematically, the processing step 200 may comprise the following operations;
Specifically, we first determine a profile slice T for each measurement signal S obtained during the processing step.
To do so, a one-dimensional Fourier transform of the measurement signal S is used, which provides the associated profile slice T as shown in
Then, from the plurality of profile slices T associated with the plurality of measurement signals S, a two-dimensional profile P is determined. As shown in
It is thus possible for example to readjust the profile slices T to fill the circular sector formed by the propagation directions of the non-focused waves.
Once the two-dimensional profile P is obtained, it is then possible to determine one or more value(s) representative of a light intensity I in the observation area 3, by a two-dimensional inverse Fourier transform of the two-dimensional profile P, as also illustrated in
In some embodiments of the invention, the profile slices T can be completed in order to determine the two-dimensional profile P.
The graph of
In both implementations, each measurement operation is repeated 1000 times to obtain an averaged measurement signal. In the implementation of the invention in
In the implementation of the known method of
As shown in
This surprising result is explained by the fact that the non-focused ultrasonic waves enable encoding, in each marked light wave, the information coming from all points of the observation area. In contrast, in the known method, the use of focused ultrasonic waves implies that each marked light wave contains information coming only from the vicinity of the focal spot.
At equivalent signal-to-noise ratio, fewer measurement operations (tens of times fewer) are required with non-focused acoustic waves than with focused acoustic waves.
In comparison to the example presented, it is possible in variant embodiments to implement one or more of the following provisions:
In this manner, at equivalent signal-to-noise ratio, it is possible to save imaging time by a factor of ten to a factor of one hundred or more, compared to the known methods described in the introduction of the present document.
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind |
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PCT/FR2015/051448 | 6/2/2015 | WO | 00 |