a. Field of the Invention
The instant invention relates to imaging tissue, more specifically the instant invention relates to imaging tissue using multi-photon microscopy (MPM).
b. Background
Imaging modalities such as digital photography and ultrasound have become integral in the clinical and surgical practice of ophthalmology over the past few decades. More recently, diode laser based imaging devices such as GDx, Heidelberg Retinal Tomography (HRT), and optical coherence tomography (OCT) have been used in the examination and early diagnosis of disease ranging from macular degeneration to glaucoma. Despite these advances, the aforementioned imaging devices are restricted in their ability to image tissue structure while being unable to elucidate tissue function. This limitation becomes even more important when noting that the structural normative databases used to delineate abnormal from normal tissue have inherent limitations. Physiologic differences from patient to patient as well as coexisting conditions, such as thinning of the retinal nerve fiber layer (RNFL) in high myopia, may alter the structure of tissues but often do not alter actual visual function.
Multi-photon microscopy (MPM) has found increasing use in laboratory based biomedical imaging due to its sub-cellular resolution along with the ability to obtain structural and functional information. These properties make MPM unique compared to other imaging modalities such as ultrasound, magnetic resonance imaging (MRI), or X-ray/computed tomography (CT) imaging. However, to achieve these benefits, there is a drawback in the limited tissue penetration depth as well as the ability to image highly scattering tissues such as sclera.
A system, method, and apparatus for imaging tissue (e.g., eye tissue) using multi-photon microscopy. In one embodiment, for example, multi-photon microscopy may be used to image living tissue in an intact eye. The imaging, for example, may be performed in vivo or ex vivo.
In one particular implementation, for example, the imaging is performed by scanning for multiple axis image detection. An alignment mechanism is used to locate a region to be imaged. The alignment mechanism, for example, may include incorporated spectral optical coherence tomography or confocal reflectance imaging capabilities.
The imaging may be performed without labels using multimodal image acquisition including at least two of the following imaging techniques: two photon excitation fluorescence/autofluorescence, fluorescence/autofluorescence lifetime, second harmonic generation, third harmonic generation, coherent anti-Stokes Raman scattering (CARS) spectroscopy, broadband or multiplexCARS (B-CARS or M-CARS), stimulated Raman scattering (SRS), stimulated emission, nonlinear absorption, micro-Raman spectroscopy, and the like.
In some implementations where the imaging target is located within the intact eye, a long working distance objective or an imaging lens is used to access the target (e.g., a trabecular meshwork region of the intact eye).
In one particular embodiment, for example, a new diagnostic paradigm for diagnosing eye diseases, such as glaucoma, in vivo using multi photon microscopy. While clinical light-imaging techniques currently in use cannot image TM cells within living tissue, multi-photon imaging technology can provide greater penetration depth and spatial resolution. The use of multi-photon microscopy in a clinical environment provides many practical advantages to techniques that use visible light or ultrasound. The sensitivity of retinal chromophores to the near infra-red laser (800 nm) is low, resulting in greater patient comfort. The laser pulses have high peak power, but due to the extremely short pulse duration (˜100 femtoseconds) have a low average power. This, combined with tight focusing, leads to efficient two-photon excitation with low power absorption and thermal exposure to the tissue. Finally, the resolution of the multi-photon microscope has the potential to analyze living tissue with histological accuracy without actually taking a biopsy sample. Living skin has been imaged by two photon microscopy to a depth of 350 microns by visualizing the autofluorescence of the skin's extracellular matrix and melanin. The experimentally measured resolution was determined to be 0.5-1 microns lateral by 3-5 microns axial, which is on par with typical resolution of a 5 micron thick histological section.
The foregoing and other aspects, features, details, utilities, and advantages of the present invention will be apparent from reading the following description and claims, and from reviewing the accompanying drawings.
Systems, methods, and apparatuses for imaging tissue, such as for imaging eye tissue in vivo (e.g., an intact eye) or ex vivo are provided. Although examples of imaging eye tissue are described in detail, various imaging modalities have application for imaging tissue outside of the eye. In addition, imaging of the trabecular meshwork in the anterior chamber of an eye are discussed merely as an example. Other tissues within the eye, such as cornea, conjunctiva, Schlemm's canal, collector channels, sclera, ciliary body, iris, lens, retina, choroid, optic nerve, vitreous, aqueous humor, blood vessels as well as tissues surrounding these structures, may also be imaged in vivo or ex vivo. The imaging of eye tissue may be performed for diagnostic purposes, during a surgical procedure in which the power of the same imaging laser may be increased for the surgical procedure or in which a separate laser or other surgical implement may be used in addition to the imaging laser source, and/or to monitor drug delivery.
In one particular implementation, tissue imaging may be performed in vivo without labels using multi-photon microscopy (MPM) techniques.
Traditional fluorescence microscopy (epifluorescence or confocal) is based on linear absorption processes: a single photon excites a fluorophore resulting in the emission of a photon with a longer wavelength. When using excitation light sources in the visible range, these events are confined to within 100 microns of the surface of the tissue due to light scattering.
In contrast, multi-photon microscopy is based on non-linear processes that involve multiple photons interacting with molecules in the sample. Since the probability of simultaneous interactions with two (or more) photons is extremely low (cross-sections on order of 10−50 cm4 s or 1 GM), the process occurs when there is high photon flux (such as on the order of 106-108 W/cm2). This is typically achieved using a pulsed near-infrared laser with a pulse duration on order of ˜100 femtoseconds focused with a high numerical aperture objective. As a result, MPM offers intrinsic axial cross sectioning because the process only occurs at the focus of the microscope objective where the laser intensity is greatest. MPM imaging offers equivalent resolution as confocal microscopy (˜200 nm lateral and ˜1.0 micron axial) but does not require the use of a pinhole. An additional advantage of using a near-infrared laser source is deeper tissue penetration due to reduced light scattering with longer wavelengths of light. MPM can provide contrast without exogenous dye labeling and is a completely non-invasive technique.
Multi-photon microscopy includes the following imaging modalities: two photon excitation fluorescence (TPEF) or autofluorescence (TPAF), fluorescence lifetime imaging (FLIM), second harmonic generation (SHG), third harmonic generation (THG), coherent anti-stokes Raman scattering (CARS) spectroscopy, broadband or multiplex CARS (B-CARS or M-CARS), stimulated Raman scattering (SRS), stimulated emission, nonlinear absorption, micro-Raman spectroscopy and the like. Various embodiments provide both structural and functional imaging of the tissue that may allow a physician to make more informed decisions on surgery or course of treatment.
In two-photon excitation fluorescence (TPEF) imaging, intense short-pulsed near infrared light is focused into a small volume, thereby increasing the probability of two photons arriving ‘simultaneously’ at a target molecule. The combined energy is absorbed by the target molecule and released as a single photon. Imaging biological molecules (such as NAD(P)H, FAD, elastin, melanin, and lipofuscin) in this manner is often referred to as two-photon autofluorescence (TPAF), since the fluorescence results from the intrinsic properties of these molecules. Another two-photon process is second harmonic generation (SHG). In this case, two photons are simultaneously ‘scattered’ by a highly ordered asymmetric macromolecule (like collagen fibril), resulting in a single photon with a precise wavelength of half the excitation wavelength, that is distinct from any generated autofluorescence (AF). Due to the narrow SHG spectral peak and difference in wavelength, AF and SHG signals can be separated using spectral filtering and simultaneously detected.
CARS is a multi-photon imaging technique that is fundamentally different from both TPEF/TPAF and SHG. CARS is a nonlinear version of Raman spectroscopy. In the Raman process, a narrow band laser illuminates the sample and a portion of the incident photons are scattered by interactions with molecular vibrations, resulting in a shift to higher (anti-Stokes) or lower frequency (Stokes) photons. The signal intensity is very weak because of the extremely low scattering cross-section (˜10−30 cm2/molecule) as opposed to the absorption cross-section of a typical fluorophore (˜10−15 cm2/molecule).
In contrast to traditional Raman spectroscopy, CARS is a nonlinear optical process that selectively and coherently excites vibrational resonances of biomolecules to rapidly obtain the Raman (vibrational) spectrum. Compared to traditional Raman scattering, the CARS process increases the detection sensitivity by up to 107 to allow rapid data acquisition. With the associated decrease in measurement times, CARS can be applied in biomedical microscopy to image live cells at video rates without extrinsic fluorescence dye labeling. In the CARS process, two photons (pump and Stokes) excite a specific vibrational resonance coherently. A third photon (probe) subsequently measures the density of the vibrational resonance. The number of emitted anti-Stokes photons that are energy shifted by that vibrational mode is proportional to the square of the density of the vibrational oscillators, thus the molecular concentration. A traditional CARS setup uses two synchronized picosecond lasers or a single picosecond laser with an optical parametric amplifier to generate the two laser beams with different frequencies matched to one particular vibrational resonance. By tuning the laser frequency difference to a particular vibrational mode, for example 2850 cm−1 of the CH2 stretch for lipids, chemical-specific imaging can be achieved all without use of fluorescent dyes or other labeling techniques.
Endogenous fluorophores have varying two-photon cross sections as a function of wavelength and have been measured and reported. The center wavelength of a Ti:Sapphire laser can be tuned over a large spectral range from 700 to 1050 nm, making it an extremely useful source for two-photon autofluorescence excitation. In this manner, different compounds in tissue can be highlighted by tuning the excitation wavelength. For example, the two-photon cross-sections of many endogenous fluorophores peak below 700 nm and decrease at higher wavelengths while SHG emission remains strong at longer wavelengths from 900-1000 nm. By tuning to longer wavelengths, collagen structures in tissue can be distinguished from autofluorescence. In another example of the utility of excitation wavelength tuning, NAD(P)H was distinguished from FAD by excitation at 730 nm where both compounds are excited and at 900 nm where FAD is exclusively excited while NAD(P)H has a negligible two-photon cross section. Table 1 gives a list of endogenous fluorophores and tissue structures and example imaging techniques that provides contrast mechanisms.
Fluorescence lifetime imaging microscopy (FLIM) is an additional imaging technique that is better able to distinguish between the different endogenous fluorophores in a biological sample. Due to the broad and overlapping emission spectra of many endogenous fluorophores, it can be difficult to quantitatively measure the concentrations of these different species contributing to the autofluorescence emission signal by spectral filtering alone. Fluorescence lifetime can also provide information on the surrounding environment of the fluorophore. FLIM is based on the fact that every fluorophore has a characteristic excited state lifetime, τ, or time for the molecule to decay from the excited electronic state to the ground state. This decay is characterized by a single or multiple exponential (in the case of an inhomogeneous environment) of the form:
where P(t) is the population in the excited state as a function of time. Here, P0 is the initial population in the excited state and Ai is the normalized amplitude of the exponential component with lifetime τi. Fluorescence lifetime signal from a biological sample containing multiple fluorophores can become further complicated. For multiple exponential lifetimes, the average lifetime value is sometimes reported, given by:
This lifetime information can be measured either by time domain or frequency domain methods. In a time domain technique, a pulsed excitation source is used to excite the fluorophore of interest in the biological sample. The subsequent time profile of the fluorescence emission is measured using time gating techniques.
FLIM has found particular use in imaging NAD(P)H. Bound and un-bound NADH have different characteristic lifetimes (free NADH ˜0.3 ns, protein bound NADH ˜2 ns) and therefore can be used to measure the ratios of these populations giving an indication of metabolic activity.
Optical Instrumentation
Different multi-photon microscopy imaging modalities (e.g., both TPEF and SHG) can be simultaneously measured using the same optical setup where signals of the respective modalities occur at distinct wavelengths. Spectral filtering can be used to separate the distinct wavelengths for the different imaging modalities. Both TPEF and SHG, for example, can be simultaneously measured using the same optical setup because the SHG signal occurs at a distinct wavelength (exactly half the excitation wavelength) and can be separated from autofluorescence using spectral filtering.
Excitation light 36 is directed to and focused onto a sample 48 via an optical system 38. In the particular implementations shown in
In the system shown in
Due to the limitations in the penetration depth, MPM has so far only been applied in the clinic for screening of the skin. The optical system shown in
In one embodiment, for example, the optical system may include compound gradient refractive index (GRIN) lenses as focusing optics, double-clad photonic crystal fibers for superior detection efficiency and mechanical flexibility, and/or microelectromechanical systems (MEMS) scanning mirrors. GRIN lenses, for example, have a typical size of 0.2-1 mm in diameter, 1-10 cm in length, and a numerical aperture of less than 0.6. Due to low numerical aperture and optical aberration, the optical Rayleigh resolution may be limited (e.g., to ˜1 μm in lateral and ˜10 μm in axial direction). In other embodiments, the optical system may comprise aberration-corrected, high NA plano-convex lenses (NA<0.85) acting like micro-objectives to provide on-axis resolution comparable to water-immersion objectives. The optical system may further take advantage of other microendoscopy technology to achieve multiphoton microscopy in intrabody clinical imaging.
Another clinical application of MPM is in histology where there is no requirement for deep tissue penetration as the tissue can easily be sectioned in 10-100 μm thick slices. MPM can have advantages over traditional histological staining techniques by providing more detailed information and highlighting features without perturbing the sample through processing. Preparation of samples for both standard histological staining and electron microscopy require chemical fixation and dehydration with alcohols. These treatments can cause artifacts and distortions within the tissue due to infusion of fixatives and shrinkage of tissue due to alcohol treatment. In additional, changes to fine tissue morphology can occur with heat-infusion of paraffin (for histology) or with polymerization of resin (EM).
Multi-Photon Eye Imaging
In one particular embodiment, multi-photon imaging is used to image an eye. Multi-photon imaging, for example, may be used to image sections of an eye or an intact eye. The mult-photon imaging, for example, may image an eye for disease identification, diagnostics, drug delivery monitoring, or the like. Although examples are provided for imaging eye tissue, the same techniques can also be used to image other types of tissue as well. For example, tissues such as skin, oral, and nasal cavities may be imaged using multi-photon imaging.
Glaucoma is one example of a disease that may be identified and/or tracked using multi-photon imaging technology. Glaucoma is the second leading cause of blindness in the United States affecting approximately 3 million adults. Worldwide, the numbers are estimated to increase to 60 million by 2020. Glaucoma most often occurs in people over age 40, although a congenital or infantile form of glaucoma also exists. While glaucoma is a neurodegenerative disease (a disease involving loss of nerve cells in the eye), the primary problem is loss of proper fluid flow out of the eye's drainage system. This leads to an increase in eye pressure, known as an increase in intraocular pressure (TOP). It is important to realize that not all patients with glaucoma have an obvious increase in IOP, and that some patients with high IOP don't necessarily have glaucoma. IOP is just a measurement that helps identify people at risk for developing the disease. Current ways to diagnose glaucoma include 1) checking peripheral vision with a “Visual Field Machine”, 2) examining the thickness of the retina and nerve in the back of the eye (known as the optic nerve) for loss of tissue that results from loss of nerve cells, 3) checking IOP with an eye pressure machine known as a tonometer. None of these tests can measure the workings of the actual drainage system of the eye. This is why we believe there is a great need for new devices that can diagnose glaucoma by directly measuring the tissue in the drainage system for any signs of problems. The tissue in the drainage system is known as trabecular meshwork (TM).
In one embodiment, multi-photon microscopy (MPM) imaging can be used to image one or more regions of the eye, such as regions of the eye implicated in a variety of disease pathologies. Current clinical techniques for imaging include optical coherence tomography (OCT) and confocal reflectance microscopy as well as fluorescence imaging. In comparison with MPM imaging, OCT imaging has poorer spatial resolution of 2-10 μm and therefore cannot be used to reveal sub-cellular level structure. While confocal reflectance microscopy does allow sub-cellular level resolution, its contrast mechanism is due to changes in index of refraction and therefore it does not have the functional information inherent in MPM imaging. Fluorescence imaging uses exogenous dyes to stain the eye in a non-specific manner typically for looking at the vasculature in the retina. None of these approaches are capable of providing functional data for imaged tissues and are thus limited in their ability to direct or influence clinical decision making on a consistent basis. Although these approaches have limitations, multi-photon approaches may be used in combination with these other approaches.
MPM imaging of the retina has also been demonstrated and may find utility in detection of retinal pigment epithelium (RPE) dysfunction and photoreceptor related dystrophies. To date, no imaging of the retina has been performed through the anterior chamber, although explants of human retina and RPE have been imaged by the tissue autofluorescence. There are additional difficulties in imaging the retina for clinical applications due to the optical constraints posed by the iris that effectively limit the numerical aperture. For example, for an iris opening of 8 mm diameter and typical distance from iris to the retina of 17 mm, the effective numerical aperture, which is indicative of the collection angle of the emitted optical signal, is given by the equation NA=n sin θ˜0.3, using the index of refraction of water (n=1.33). The numerical aperture also limits how tightly the excitation light can be focused. In addition, the aberrations in the lens of the eye can also decrease the obtainable resolution using multi-photon imaging. In order to alleviate this problem, wavefront correction using adaptive optics has been performed for retinal imaging.
To our knowledge, MPM imaging of a living retina/RPE has only been performed in a rodent eye by imaging through the exterior sclera. In this instance, Imanishi et al used MPM to view the retina/RPE autofluorescence as well as to localize stores of the visual pigment retinal. See Imanishi, Y., et al., Noninvasive two-photon imaging reveals retinyl ester storage structures in the eye. J Cell Biol, 2004. 164(3): p. 373-383. The retina itself has no apparent SHG signal, although the overlying retinal vasculature and underlying connective tissue can be imaged via the collagen content. The present inventors have demonstrated this in a lab on a Zeiss LSM510 multiphoton confocal microscope 80, illustrated in
Trabecular Meshwork
In the conventional outflow system of the eye, aqueous humor exits the anterior chamber through the trabecular meshwork (TM) before passing through Schlemm's canal. This region is characterized by overlapping collagen bundles that create a porous tissue populated by TM endothelial cells. These cells have been implicated in maintaining the health of the TM, the number of live TM cells within the meshwork was found to be statistically lower in patients with primary open-angle glaucoma (Alvarado Ophthalmology 1984; 91(6):564-579). The trabecular meshwork (TM) lies just outside of the circumference of the cornea, below the outer edge of the scleral region of the eye as shown in
Currently, neither optical coherence tomography (OCT) nor an ultrasound biomicroscope can image the TM/Schlemm's canal region with fine enough resolution to either diagnose or follow the progression of glaucoma. OCT uses low-coherence light interference to generate cross-sectional images of the eye with a 10 micron axial resolution and 20 micron transverse resolution. An ultrasound biomicroscope has similar resolution (˜25 microns) with better ability to detect small density differences. Neither method, however, has the resolution to image the conventional outflow pathway (Schlemm's canal, collector channels), or the ability to distinguish TM cells from the surrounding extracellular matrix.
Multiple embodiments have demonstrated imaging the TM using MPM imaging. In one embodiment, for example, using Two-Photon AutoFluorescence (TPAF) and Second Harmonic Generation (SHG) nonlinear optical microscopy, the collagen fibrils in the TM can be readily imaged without the needs of exogenous fluorophores. See, e.g., Ammar D A, Lei T C, Gibson E A, Kahook M Y. Two-photon imaging of the trabecular meshwork. Mol Vis. 2010; 16:935-44. PMCID: 2890557; and Gibson E A, Masihzadeh O, Lei T C, Ammar D A, Kahook M Y. Multiphoton microscopy for ophthalmic imaging. J. Ophthalmol. 2011; 2011:870879. PMCID: 3022205, each of which is incorporated herein in its entirety.
In another embodiment, Two-Photon AutoFluorescence (TPAF) can be used to visualize the endogenous NADP(H) of living human trabecular meshwork cells (TM cells), and map the response of these cells to oxidative stress. See, e.g., Masihzadeh O, Ammar D A, Lei T C, Gibson E A, Kahook M Y. Real-time measurements of nicotinamide adenine dinucleotide in live human trabecular meshwork cells: Effects of acute oxidative stress. Exp Eye Res. 2011, which is incorporated herein in its entirety. This process may be adapted to imaging TM cells within the eye.
In another embodiment, using CARS microscopy further allowed imaging TM cells that reside in the collagen mesh structure in the TM. In this embodiment, TM cells were readily imaged without exogenous labeling at the corneal rim of a human cadaver eye.
SHG and TPAF
In one example embodiment of an imaging system, a commercial Zeiss LSM510 multiphoton confocal microscope with an LCI “Plan-NeoFluar” 25× objective (Zeiss) with a 0.21 mm working distance was used. While it was unable to perform trans-sclera imaging, TPM was successfully performed on a human eye with the TM flat-mounted toward the objective lens. TPAF from the extracellular matrix was imaged in the TM and scleral strip [
Further analysis on a similar region shown in
Comparing the fibrous structures seen by TPM with the structures seen in standard histological section of the TM region of the eye
Towards the goal of imaging TM cells within unfixed tissue, another experiment was performed in which a fluorescent nuclear stain (Hoechst 33342) was injected into the anterior chamber of an intact donor eye. The eye was then opened, and a section of TM was flat-mounted facing the microscope objective. The TM cell nuclei 110 was imaged using standard two-photon excitation (TPEF) of the fluorescent dye. The collagen fibers within the TM were imaged by SHG 112 (lighter color fibers) as shown in
Another imaging example used a long-working distance 20× objective lens (Zeiss LD “Plan-NeoFluar”), with NA of 0.4 and a working distance 7.9 mm. This allowed imaging of a human eye through the sclera (sclera mounted facing the objective lens). Once again, the TM cell nuclei (blue) are imaged by standard TPM and the collagen fibers of the TM (white) imaged by SHG.
In another example embodiment, multi-photon imaging of the TM region of an eye was demonstrated using SHG and TPAF. See, e.g., Ammar, D., et al., Two-photon imaging of the trabecular meshwork. Molecular Vision, 2010. 16: p. 935-944, which is incorporated by reference herein in its entirety for all that it teaches and discloses. Imaging of the TM region of the eye is important because degeneration of the TM is implicated in glaucoma, therefore characterizing the cell and collagen structures in the TM may allow early diagnosis, disease monitoring, as well as fundamental studies of the disease mechanism.
Although the SHG signal is comparatively weaker than the TPAF, these two signals are qualitatively the same when overlapped in
CARS and TPAF
In another implementation, the MPM imaging of the eye, such as the trabecular meshwork (TM) of the eye is performed via a combination of coherent anti-Stokes Raman scattering (CARS) and one or more other MPM imaging technique, such as two-photon autofluorescence (TPAF). In this implementation, flat-mounted trabecular meshwork samples from human cadaver eyes were imaged using CARS and TPAF non-linear optical techniques. In TPAF, two optical photons are simultaneously absorbed by autofluorescence molecules such as collagen and elastin. The CARS technique uses two laser frequencies to specifically excite carbon-hydrogen bonds, allowing the visualization of lipid-rich cell membranes. Multiple images were taken along an axis perpendicular to the surface of the TM for subsequent analysis.
Analysis of multiple TPAF images taken at various distances beneath the surface of the TM revealed the characteristic overlapping bundles of collagen of various sizes. Simultaneous CARS imaging revealed round structures of 10.3±1.2 microns by 6.9±1.1 microns in diameter populating the meshwork that appeared to be TM cells. Irregularly shaped objects of 4.2±0.6 microns by 3.2±0.4 microns appeared in both the TPAF and CARS channels, and are assumed to be melanin granules. In this example, CARS imaging allowed imaging of live TM cells in freshly isolated human TM samples.
In this implementation, a human globe was obtained from the San Diego Eye Bank (San Diego, Calif.). Approval was obtained from the Colorado Multiple Institutional Review Board for the use of human material and the tenets of the Declaration of Helsinki were followed. Informed consent was obtained from donor or relatives for use in research. Eyes were from a pseudophakic 86 year old donor with no history of glaucoma. The intact globe was cut circumferentially approximately 3 mm from the corneal limbus. This anterior region was cut into quadrants, and the overlying ciliary body and iris was cut away from the TM region using spring scissors. This quadrant of corneal rim tissue was placed in a glass-bottom 35 mm dish (MatTek Corporation; Ashland, Mass.) with the interior surface facing down. A small glass weight placed on top of the corneal rim to maintain contact of the tissue with the glass coverslip.
The CARS/TPAF images of the cells in the TM of the corneal rim of a cadaver eye was acquired with a custom-built multi-photon microscopy platform shown in
CARS/TPAF images are taken along the TM region in the cadaver coronal rim sample.
In
Both CARS and TPAF are powerful nonlinear label-free optical imaging techniques that are able to produce images around the TM with excellent imaging resolution. CARS and TPAF were able to be simultaneously used to acquire label-free images around the trabecular meshwork of the eye showing both the TM cells and the collagen extracellular meshwork. In one implementation, the CARS laser photon energy difference was set to the CH2 vibrational frequency, allowing the detection of the various lipid molecules that compose the plasma membrane of living cells. In addition, the excitation photons used in CARS microscopy can be simultaneously absorbed and autofluoresce by the collagen molecules through TPAF. Combining the two techniques, the collagen structures and the TM cells can be readily observed without exogenous labeling.
TPAF and CARS techniques were used to image deeply into the native TM region of the human eye. Images were taken at multiple depths within the tissue, allowing visualization of the tissue in three dimensions. Similar images can be achieved with histological sections or EM ultra-thin sections; however the method described here has the advantage of being performed on unprocessed, unfixed tissue. This tissue is free from the potential distortions of the fine tissue morphology that can occur within the tissue due to infusion of fixatives and treatment with alcohols. We anticipate this new label-free imaging technique can be used to help elucidate the aqueous outflow of the trabecular meshwork and the effects on the TM cells as the conditions of the TM region changes.
In yet another embodiment, fluorescence lifetime imaging microscopy (FLIM) is used to image tissue, such as the trabecular meshwork (TM) region of the eye. In one example, epithelial cells from the TM region were imaged with a 740 nm two-photon excitation from a Titanium:Sapphire femtosecond laser source. The predominate signal received was from NAD(P)H autofluorescence. The lifetime of each pixel in the image was measured with frequency domain FLIM. This data is plotted on phasor plots which show G(ω) versus S(ω) which are calculated from the amplitude and phase delay of the fluorescence signal.
Issues for MPM use in the clinic include accessibility of the different regions of the eye to optical light. For trans-scleral imaging, in general, only the surface of the sclera can be imaged as the highly scattering scleral tissue greatly limits optical light transmission. Others have reported measuring the optical properties of human sclera using an integrating sphere. They found a transmission of 6% at 442 nm, 35% at 804 nm, and 53% at 1064 nm. Although the excitation light for MPM ranging from 800 to 1000 nm can likely penetrate the sclera, the shorter wavelength SHG and autofluorescence emission will be greatly reduced upon collection in the epi-direction.
Another embodiment comprises monitoring drug delivery. For example, it has been reported that two-photon microscopy has been applied to monitor the trans-scleral delivery of tazarotenic acid using its intrinsic fluorescence at 500 nm. The emerging technique of stimulated Raman scattering (SRS) also has great potential for drug delivery monitoring because of the selectivity as well as the linear dependence of the signal on concentration. It has been applied to monitor penetration of dimethyl sulfoxide (DMSO), a skin-penetration enhancer and retinoic acid in the upper dermal layer. There are many opportunities for applying SRS to monitoring drug delivery in the eye due to the transparency of the tissue making deeper penetration depths possible as compared to the skin.
As described above, various embodiments involve imaging of the interior of an eye, such as targeting the trabecular meshwork (TM) region of the eye.
In
In
In
A femtosecond laser excitation source may be used within an imaging system. The femtosecond laser excitation source, can include several types of laser systems with different infra-red wavelengths. The femtosecond laser excitation source, for example, may comprise a femtosecond fiber laser. In various embodiments, for example, the femtosecond fiber laser may comprise a single mode femtosecond fiber laser, a multi-mode fiber laser, a photonic crystal fiber laser, a step index core laser, or a grading index femtosecond fiber laser.
One embodiment, for example, includes (1) a titanium sapphire (TI:Sapphire) laser while another embodiment includes (2) a pulsed fiber laser (e.g., Ytterbium of Erbium gain medium). The excitation source may also serve as a surgical instrument in which a power of a laser source used for the imaging is increased for surgical procedures and/or a separate laser that can be used for surgical purposes based on imaging results of the imaging system. In addition, another excitation light source can be introduced to perform imaging such as spectral optical coherence tomography for alignment purposes. The excitation beams from the femtosecond excitation source are passed through a two-axis scanning mirror stage, a scan lens and a tube lens. The tube lens directs the beams onto a dichroic mirror that separates the excitation beams and emission light received from a sample. The excitation beams are subsequently directed from the dichroic mirror to a microscope objective that in turn focuses the excitation beams onto the sample. The microscope objective may, for example, be mounted on a piezo-electric z-axis scanner for focusing the beams on the sample.
Emission light is received by the objective from the sample and directed back to the dichroic minor that passes the emission light to another dichroic minor that separates the emission light for multimodal acquisition according to the differing wavelengths emitted by the sample. The separated emission light is directed to a filter and a photomultiplier tube for spectral detection of each emission light signal received from the source. The detected spectral data can then be analyzed for imaging.
In the process shown in
The process also comprises selecting a modality of image acquisition. Example modalities that may be used to image a portion of an intact eye as described herein include: two photon autofluorescence, autofluorescence fluorescence lifetime, second harmonic generation, third harmonic generation, coherent anti-stokes Raman scattering (CARS), femtosecond CARS, stimulated Raman scattering, stimulated emission microscopy and the like.
The image displayed may be in two or three dimensions. The image is reconstructed by overlapping imaging provided by different modalities used to image the portion of the intact eye.
Image processing and analysis operations are also used to derive information from the multimodal image.
A special designed optical device shaped to the curvature of the cornea (see
The I/O section 204 is connected to one or more user-interface devices (e.g., a keyboard 216 and a display unit 218), a disk storage unit 212, and a disk drive unit 220. Generally, in contemporary systems, the disk drive unit 220 is a DVD/CD-ROM drive unit capable of reading the DVD/CD-ROM medium 210, which typically contains programs and data 222. Computer program products containing mechanisms to effectuate the systems and methods in accordance with the described technology may reside in the memory section 204, on a disk storage unit 212, or on the DVD/CD-ROM medium 210 of such a system 200. Alternatively, a disk drive unit 220 may be replaced or supplemented by a floppy drive unit, a tape drive unit, or other storage medium drive unit. The network adapter 224 is capable of connecting the computer system to a network via the network link 214, through which the computer system can receive instructions and data embodied in a carrier wave. Examples of such systems include SPARC systems offered by Sun Microsystems, Inc., personal computers offered by Dell Corporation and by other manufacturers of Intel-compatible personal computers, PowerPC-based computing systems, ARM-based computing systems and other systems running a UNIX-based or other operating system. It should be understood that computing systems may also embody devices such as Personal Digital Assistants (PDAs), mobile phones, gaming consoles, set top boxes, Internet enabled televisions, etc.
When used in a LAN-networking environment, the computer system 200 is connected (by wired connection or wirelessly) to a local network through the network interface or adapter 224, which is one type of communications device. When used in a WAN-networking environment, the computer system 200 typically includes a modem, a network adapter, or any other type of communications device for establishing communications over the wide area network. In a networked environment, program modules depicted relative to the computer system 200 or portions thereof, may be stored in a remote memory storage device. It is appreciated that the network connections shown are exemplary and other devices or means of communications for establishing a communications link between the computers may be used.
In accordance with an implementation, software instructions and data directed toward alignment, data acquisition, and image analysis may reside on disk storage unit, disk drive unit or other storage medium units coupled to the system. The software instructions may also be executed by CPU 206.
The embodiments of the invention described herein are implemented as logical steps in one or more computer systems. The logical operations of the present invention are implemented (1) as a sequence of processor-implemented steps executing in one or more computer systems and (2) as interconnected machine or circuit modules within one or more computer systems. The implementation is a matter of choice, dependent on the performance requirements of the computer system implementing the invention. Accordingly, the logical operations making up the embodiments of the invention described herein are referred to variously as operations, steps, objects, or modules. Furthermore, it should be understood that logical operations may be performed in any order, unless explicitly claimed otherwise or a specific order is inherently necessitated by the claim language.
Although embodiments of this invention have been described above with a certain degree of particularity, those skilled in the art could make numerous alterations to the disclosed embodiments without departing from the spirit or scope of this invention. Specifically, although particular tissues such as eye tissue and other biologic tissues have been described other materials may also be imaged in accordance with the teachings herein. For example, non-biologic structures and industrial imaging of inanimate objects may be imaged in accordance with the teachings herein. Particular example materials are in no way limiting to the applications of any and all imaging techniques discussed herein.
All directional references (e.g., upper, lower, upward, downward, left, right, leftward, rightward, top, bottom, above, below, vertical, horizontal, clockwise, and counterclockwise) are only used for identification purposes to aid the reader's understanding of the present invention, and do not create limitations, particularly as to the position, orientation, or use of the invention. Joinder references (e.g., attached, coupled, connected, and the like) are to be construed broadly and may include intermediate members between a connection of elements and relative movement between elements. As such, joinder references do not necessarily infer that two elements are directly connected and in fixed relation to each other. It is intended that all matter contained in the above description or shown in the accompanying drawings shall be interpreted as illustrative only and not limiting. Changes in detail or structure may be made without departing from the spirit of the invention as defined in the appended claims.
This application claims the benefit of U.S. provisional application No. 61/349,247, filed 28 May 2010 and U.S. provisional application No. 61,361,747 filed 6 Jul. 2010, each of which is hereby incorporated by reference as though fully set forth herein.
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind | 371c Date |
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PCT/US11/38655 | 5/31/2011 | WO | 00 | 2/13/2013 |
Number | Date | Country | |
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61349237 | May 2010 | US | |
61361747 | Jul 2010 | US |