The present application is a National Phase entry of PCT Application No. PCT/CN2015/093184, filed Oct. 29, 2015, which claims the benefit of Chinese Patent Application No. 201510666945.1, filed Oct. 15, 2015, which are incorporated herein by reference.
The present disclosure provides a light reflection imaging method for acquiring optical parameters and microstructures of tissues in a large area, which can be used in the fields of biomedical optics, remote sensing and the like.
Elastic scattering of light has long been used for analyzing random media. Reflectance spectroscopy and imaging are widely used noninvasive methods for measuring the optical properties of random media (e.g., atmosphere, oceans and tissues), including an absorption coefficient (μa) and a reduced scattering coefficient (μs′). These parameters can provide valuable information about the microstructures and the biochemical components of the media, and have been applied in the fields of cloud remote sensing, monitoring of cell apoptosis, skin characterization, cancer detection and the like. Since radiative transfer (RT) describes the propagation of light in random media, the reflectance of scattered light is essentially a difficult problem. Particularly in the case of a short light source-detector distance, the diffusion approximation usually adopted for the RT cannot work. Therefore, it is still difficult to quantify a phase function of a medium from reflectance measurement, particularly to acquire a medium phase function containing basic information of a microenvironment of the relevant medium. In the case of a random light source-detector distance, an accurate analysis model for reflectance is highly desirable. This model will be applied to rapid quantitative evaluation on optical properties, especially on a phase function of a random medium. Those reflectance empirical models in the case of a short light source-detector distance proposed recently have respective limitations. Since the phase function of the scattering medium has a significant influence on the sub-diffuse reflection in the case of a short light source-detector distance, an explicit analysis model that is related to the relation between the sub-diffuse reflectance and the phase function and can deduce the optical parameters (including the phase function) of the random medium from the reflectance distribution is extremely desirable.
The present disclosure relates to a light reflection imaging method for acquiring optical parameters and microstructures of tissues in a large area. The core of the method is to combine small-angle approximation (SAA) of radiative transfer to give a quantitative analysis relation between a near distance sub-diffuse scattering light reflectance and a scattering medium phase function.
The present disclosure provides a light reflection imaging method for acquiring optical parameters and microstructures of tissues in a large area, according to
respectively obtaining a low-frequency reflectance formula
Isnake(q)+Idiffuse(q)+μb/2μt
and a high-frequency reflectance formula
ISAA(q),
wherein qc˜2πβ,
obtaining an absorption coefficient μa and a reduced scattering coefficient μs′ from the obtained reflectance through the low-frequency reflectance formula and an inversion method in sequence,
and obtaining an anisotropic factor g, a propagation length scale lθ and an isotropic scattering background pb of a random phase function of a scattering medium with the inversion method through the high-frequency reflectance formula.
The inversion method is a table lookup method or a formula fitting method.
The high-frequency reflectance formula
is obtained from an SAA diffusion function
S(q,z;s⊥0)=exp(−iq·s⊥0z)exp[−∫0zμt(z−ζ)dζ+∫0zμs(z−ζ)χ(qζ,z−ζ)dζ]
Assuming that pForward(θ) satisfies Gaussian distribution, the random phase function p(θ) of the scattering medium is modified into:
from which
are obtained,
through piso=2pb, the SAA diffusion function is transformed into
When qlt>>1 and p<<lt,
the high-frequency reflectance can be simplified into
wherein μt′≡μa+2pbμs and the propagation length scale lΘ≡Θ/μs.
Parameters characterizing the microstructure of the system or a combination of these parameters are/is directly obtained using the high-frequency formulas ISAA (q) and ISAA (ρ) from high-frequency reflection maps of two or more media.
The low-frequency reflectance formulas
are obtained from the expressions of snake photons and diffuse photons
The absorption coefficient and the reduced scattering coefficient are directly obtained using the formula Isnake, diffuse(q) or Isnake, diffuse(ρ) from a low-frequency reflection map of one or more media.
In addition, the sub-diffuse scattering light reflectance can be first fitted to obtain the values of μb/μs, μa/μs and θ/μs; after the μb/μs is determined, it is supposed that
g=(1−2pb)(1−Θ2/2)
and then the sub-diffuse light and diffuse light reflectance distribution are fitted using least squares fitting to obtain all optical parameters.
The present disclosure includes a turbid medium reflectance calculation method applicable at a random spatial distance and in an entire spatial frequency domain and a method of measuring the reflectance of a turbid medium at high and low spatial frequencies and inverting the obtained light reflectance to obtain optical parameters of the medium. The inversion method may be a table lookup method or a formula fitting method, etc. The measurement of sub-diffuse and diffuse light reflectance of the turbid medium can be used for measuring the optical properties of the turbid medium and microstructures including a phase function and the like in a large area. The phase function of the scattering medium carries basic information about the morphology and optical properties of a single scatterer. In addition, the analysis on the phase function can be used for predicting light propagation and detecting changes or inhomogeneity of microstructures in a random medium. The analysis model proposed by the present disclosure will be extensively and importantly applied in rapid quantification of all optical properties of a scattering medium, including a phase function and the like, especially in the fields of biomedical optics, remote sensing and the like.
The embodiments of the present disclosure will be further illustrated below in conjunction with the accompanying drawings.
A collimated beam is incident on an interface of z=0 along the direction sin≃, and passes through a forward peak scattering medium, with a light reflectance of sin≃ in the backscattering direction. In such medium, non-diffuse photons only undergo a few times of large-angle scattering, and are divided into n-order non-diffuse photons according to the times n of large-angle scattering. Since the first-order non-diffuse photons undergo multiple small-angle scattering and one large-angle scattering, the main contribution can be described as a near distance form using small-angle scattering approximation to radiative transfer. The first-order non-diffuse photons are referred to as SAA photons. The second-order non-diffuse photons are referred to as snake photons.
Backscattering of the SAA photons is mainly determined by the diffusion of a forward scattering angle and the backscattering efficiency. It is supposed that the phase function p(θ) (normalized into 2π∫0πp(θ)sin θdθ=1) of the scattering medium is divided into a forward peak scattering component and an isotropic component, e.g.,
PSAA(θ)=(1−2pb)PForward(θ)+(2π)−1pb(pb<<1).
In a layered medium, the SAA diffusion function for a collimated beam incident at the origin (r=0) in the direction s0 to the depth z is given by the following formula:
S(q,z;s⊥0)=exp(−iq·s⊥0z)exp[−∫0zμt(z−ζ)dζ+∫0zμs(z−ζ)χ(qζ,z−ζ)dζ]
wherein q is a spatial frequency on the xy plane, s⊥0 is the projection of S0 on the interface, μt=μs+μa, in which μs is a scattering coefficient, and χ(v, z) is two-dimensional Fourier transformation of (1−2pb)pForward(θ,z). The second index item is expanded into
exp(−∫0zμt(ζ)dζ)[1+∫0zμs(z−ζ)χ(qζ,z−ζ)dζ+ . . . ]
with a 0-order ballistic item, so that S coming from each scattering orders 0, 1, . . . can be identified.
Then, the reflectance of the SAA photons is obtained, which can be expressed as
In the above formula, the backscattering coefficient μb≡μs(z)p(π,z), s⊥=s⊥in+s⊥out, Seff is a diffusion function for a valid medium with the same phase function and double absorption and scattering, Seff′ is a diffusion function for a second valid medium with the same phase function and scattering and a absorption coefficient modified to 2μa+2pbμs. The second item of formula (2) above indicates that when the photons enter or escape from the medium, they pass through an isotropic scattering path instead of a forward peak scattering path, and the probabilities of the two paths are Piso and 1−Piso(Piso<<1) respectively (see
Assuming that pForward (θ) satisfies Gaussian distribution, the random phase function p(θ) of the scattering medium is modified into
from which
are obtained,
The n-order moment of PSAA is obtained from
Specifically, the anisotropic factor (n=1) is
g=(1−2pb)[1−Θ2/2]. (4)
Through piso=2pb in formula (2), the SAA diffusion function, namely formula (1), is simplified into
Wherein erf is an error function. Compared with the order of other approximate solution truncated phase function moments of radiative transfer, the reflectance (2) of the SAA photons contains the contributions coming from all moments of the phase function.
The expression of PSAA is consistent with a unified Mie and fractal model of light scattering caused by tissues and cells. The Gaussian item captures the contribution from Mie scattering, and the isotropic scattering item is correlated with the refractive index fluctuation of the background. The root mean square scattering angle θ decreases with the size of the Mie scatterer (large structure) in the tissues and cells.
When qlt>>1 and ρ<<lt,
the high-frequency reflectance can be simplified into
wherein μt′≡μa+2pbμs and the propagation length scale lΘ≡Θ/μs.
Parameters characterizing the microstructure of the system or a combination of these parameters are/is directly obtained by inversion using the high-frequency formulas ISAA (q) and ISAA (ρ) from high-frequency reflection maps of two or more media.
The low-frequency reflectance formulas
are obtained from the expressions of snake photons and diffuse photons
In the expression, β≡μa+μs′, μs′≡μs(1−g), g is an anisotropic factor, G(snake, diffuse) is a Green's function of snake photons and diffuse photons respectively, G(snake)(r,r′)=exp(−β|r−r′|)/4π|r−r′|2 is a Green's function of snake photons, and the snake photons are propagated along an isotropic source trajectory in an isotropic scattering turbid medium. In the Fourier domain, the reflectance of the snake photons and the diffuse photons can be simplified into:
wherein Q≡√{square root over (q2+3μaμs′)}, Ze is an extrapolation length dependent on refractive index mismatch at the interface.
The absorption coefficient and the reduced scattering coefficient can be directly inverted using the formula Isnake, diffuse(q) or Isnake, diffuse(ρ) from a low-frequency reflection map of one or more media.
In the Monte Carlo simulation, the total number of incident photons is set to 106, assuming that the semi-infinite medium is matched with the surrounding refractive index. Absorption of the scattering medium is achieved by adding a non-zero imaginary part to the refractive index of the polystyrene particles. The parameters corresponding to the SAA photons are pb=0.0177 and Θ=0.451, pb=0.0171 and Θ=0.447, pb=0.0194 and Θ=0.587, respectively.
Table 2, Comparison of parameters fitted by Monte Carlo simulation on the light reflectance of polystyrene sphere suspension (d=1.5 μm, μa/μs′=0.16) and theoretical values.
The SAA photons and the combined snake and diffuse scattering photons well describe the reflectance of a light source and a detector in a real space over short and long distances (
When the distance is greater than β−1, this division on the backscattering light is consistent with the general radial distribution independent from the specific form of a phase function. Formula (8) perfectly describes the light reflectance of a forward peak scattering medium with low and medium absorption (μa/μs′<1). Table 1 shows the similarity calculated within 0≤q/μs′≤100 between the Fourier space model and the Monte Carlo simulation. The similarity between the model and the Monte Carlo simulation is defined as follows
wherein SSR=Σ(log Imodal−log IMC)2 is a mean square error of the model, SST=Σ(log IMC−
The closed form of the light reflectance is:
The closed form (8) of the light reflectance and the limiting forms (6) and (7) show, in addition to well-known transfer mean free path lt=1/(1−g)μs acting on light diffusion and reflectance at low spatial frequencies (long distance), there is a new propagation length scale lΘ≡Θ/μs characterizing the reflectance of sub-diffuse light at high spatial frequencies (short distance), which is determined only by the angle width of the forward peak portion of the phase function. For the forward peak scattering medium, an internal relation between the above two dimensions can be further established through formula (4), and approximately satisfies μs3ltlθ2=2. The high-frequency (short distance) light reflectance can be conveniently measured through formulas (6, 7).
A complete group of optical properties of the turbid medium is determined by fitting the light reflectance at low and high spatial frequencies, and the group of optical properties include an SAA phase function defined entirely by the diffusion angle Θ of the scattering light, an isotropic scattering background pb of a random phase function of a scattering medium, a backscattering coefficient μb, a scattering coefficient μs, an absorption coefficient μa and an anisotropic factor g.
For example, table 2 shows the parameter results of fitting the light reflectance of polystyrene suspension (d=1.5 μm, μa/μs′=0.16) based on Monte Carlo simulation.
In addition, the sub-diffuse scattering light reflectance can be first fitted to obtain the values of μb/μs, μa/μs and Θ/μs, g=(1−2pb)(1−Θ2/2) is assumed after the μb/μs is determined, and then the sub-diffuse light and the diffuse light reflectance distribution are fitted using least squares fitting to obtain all optical parameters.
The group of optical parameters obtained from the light reflectance agree well with the theoretical values. In particular, the precision of the extracted scattering characteristics and phase function parameters (μ, g, Θ) is very good, partly because of the constraints between g and Θ. g and Θ characterize the diffuse scattering and sub-diffuse scattering light reflectance caused by the forward peak scattering medium, respectively.
In summary, the present disclosure proposes a reflectance analysis model describing a forward peak scattering medium at a random light source and detector distance, and its application in analyzing the optical parameters and phase functions of the forward peak scattering medium. When the absorption is at medium to low levels, the analysis model shows excellent performance over the entire spatial scale, and it has been successfully proved that the model can be applied to accurately determine the optical properties and phase functions of the turbid medium from the sub-diffuse and diffuse light reflectance of the medium. The phase function of the scattering medium carries basic information about the morphology and the optical properties of a single scatterer. In addition, the analysis on the phase function can also be used for predicting light propagation and detecting the changes or inhomogeneities of microstructures in a random medium. With the development of spatial modulated illumination in recent years, it has become possible to quickly measure the reflectance of sub-diffuse and diffuse scattering light in a wide field of view. Therefore, the analysis model proposed by the present disclosure will be extensively and importantly applied in rapid quantification of all optical properties of a scattering medium, including a phase function and the like, especially in the fields of biomedical optics, remote sensing and the like.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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2015 1 0666945 | Oct 2015 | CN | national |
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind |
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PCT/CN2015/093184 | 10/29/2015 | WO | 00 |
Publishing Document | Publishing Date | Country | Kind |
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WO2017/063236 | 4/20/2017 | WO | A |
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Number | Date | Country | |
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20180321148 A1 | Nov 2018 | US |