Disclosed is an optical scanning endoscope apparatus that scans an observation object with illumination light to perform observation.
There has been developed in recent years optical scanning endoscope apparatuses which vibratory drive an oscillatably-supported fiber to scan illumination light emitted from an emitting end part of the fiber on an observation object and detects light reflected by or scattered on the observation object.
The aforementioned optical scanning endoscope apparatuses are configured to have the fiber run through a holding member having an inner hole for inserting the fiber therethrough, and to vibrately drive the holding member in a two-dimensional direction perpendicular to the fiber optical axis direction, to thereby two-dimensionally scan the illumination light on the observation object. The holding member is formed as, for example, a cubic ferrule having the longitudinal direction thereof in the optical axis direction of the fiber. The ferrule has piezoelectric elements disposed on four sides thereof along the longitudinal direction, which may be applied with vibration voltage, to thereby vibrate the fiber. Alternatively, the holding member may be configured as a columnar piezoelectric tube having an inner hole for inserting the fiber therethrough, which may have total four electrodes disposed around the fiber optical axis on the periphery of the piezoelectric tube at positions displaced by 90° from one another and may apply vibration voltage to the electrodes, to thereby vibrates the fiber (see, for example, JP2014036779A (PTL 1)).
PTL 1: JP2014036779A
Meanwhile, a single mode optical fiber has a diameter on the order of 100 μm, and the holding member supporting the optical fiber is in a size on the order of several hundreds of micrometers in a direction perpendicular to the optical fiber axis. The holding member is so small that it causes manufacturing difficulty to accurately form the outer shape and arrange the position of the inner hole with as originally designed. Further, it again involves manufacturing difficulty to symmetrically attach piezoelectric elements when the holding member is formed as a ferrule, or to have piezoelectric elements accurately displaced by 90° from one another when the holding member is formed as a piezoelectric tube. Under such circumstances, the vibration of the fiber caused by piezoelectric elements opposing to each other across the fiber fails to be in an ideal direction, with the result that the two-dimensional scanning locus is distorted as deviated from an ideal scanning locus.
The above is explained with reference to
In contrast, the actuator manufactured in practice may be configured asymmetric as having the piezoelectric substrate 13b displaced in position, as illustrated in
Further, the inclined scanning patterns shown in
The disclosed optical scanning endoscope apparatus, includes:
a fiber which guides light from a light source and has a leading end part is oscillatably supported;
a first driver element designed to vibrate the leading end part of the fiber in a first direction;
a second driver element designed to vibrate the leading end part of the fiber in a second direction substantially perpendicular to the first direction;
a first vibration suppression element which drives the leading end part of the fiber such as to cancel out at least some vibration components in the first direction generated by the second driver element;
an optical system which irradiates light emitted from the fiber, toward an observation object;
a photodetector which detects light obtained by the observation object irradiated with the light and converts the light thus detected into an electric signal; and
an image processor which generates an image based on the electric signal output by the photodetector.
The first vibration suppression element may preferably be disposed opposing to the first driver element across the fiber.
Alternatively, the first vibration suppression element may be disposed on the same side or on the opposite side of the first driver element, along the fiber.
Further, the first driver element and the second driver element may drive the leading end part of the fiber to spiral scan, and the first vibration suppression element may be driven by a drive signal having a phase difference of 90° relative to a drive signal of the first driver element.
Alternatively, the first driver element and the second driver element may drive the leading end part of the fiber to Lissajous scan, and the first vibration suppression element may be driven by a drive signal having the same frequency as that of a drive signal of the second driver element.
Further, the optical scanning endoscope apparatus may further include a second vibration suppression element which drives the leading end part of the fiber such as to cancel out at least some vibration components in the second direction generated by the first driver element.
In the accompanying drawings:
Hereinafter, Embodiments of the disclosed apparatus will be illustrated with reference to the accompanying drawings.
The control device body 30 is configured by including: a controller 31 controlling the whole of the optical scanning endoscope apparatus 10; an emission timing controller 32; lasers 33R, 33G, 33B; and a coupler 34. The emission timing controller 32 controls, under the control of the controller 31, emission timing of the three lasers 33R, 33G, 33B emitting laser lights of three primary colors of red, green, and blue. The lasers 33R, 33G, 33B may use, for example, a diode pumped solid state (DPSS) laser and a laser diode. Laser lights emitted from the lasers 33R, 33G, 33B are multiplexed by the coupler 34, and caused to be incident on an illumination optical fiber 11 as a single mode fiber. Needless to say, the optical scanning endoscope apparatus 10 may employ, as the light source, one laser light source or a plurality of other light sources, without being limited to the aforementioned configuration. Further, the lasers 33R, 33G, 33B and the coupler 34 may be accommodated not in the control device body 30 but in another casing connected to the control device body 30 via a signal line.
The illumination optical fiber 11 is connected all the way to the tip part of the scope 20, and light incident on the illumination optical fiber 11 from the coupler 34 is guided through to the tip part of the scope 20 to be irradiated toward an observation object 50. At this time, an actuator 21 is vibratory driven, so as to allow illumination light emitted from the illumination optical fiber 11 to be two-dimensionally scanned on an observation surface of the observation object 50. The actuator 21 is controlled by a drive controller 38 to be described later of the control device body 30. The observation object 50 irradiated with illumination light generates signal light such as reflected light, scattered light, and fluorescence, which is received by the leading end of a detection optical fiber 12 formed of a plurality of multimode fibers and guided through inside the scope 20 to the control device body 30.
The control device body 30 further includes: a photodetector 35 for processing signal light; an analog-to-digital converter (ADC) 36; and an image processor 37. The photodetector 35 decomposes signal light having traveled through the detection optical fiber 12 into spectral components, and converts, by means of photodiodes or the like, each of the spectral components into an electric signal. The image signal thus converted into an electric signal is converted into a digital signal by the ADC 36, which outputs the digital signal to the image processor 37. The controller 31 calculates information on the scanning position on the scanning path, based on the drive start timing of vibration voltage applied by the drive controller 38 and information on the amplitude, the phase, and the like. Alternatively, the controller 31 obtains the information from a lookup table previously prepared. Then, the controller 31 passes the information thus calculated or obtained to the image processor 37. The image processor 37 obtains pixel data on the observation object 50 at the scanning position, based on a digital signal input from the ADC 36. The image processor 37 sequentially stores, in a memory (not shown), information on the scanning position and the pixel data, subjects the information to necessary processing such as interpolation processing after or during the scan to generate an image of the observation object 50, and displays the image on the display 40.
In each processing described above, the controller 31 synchronously controls the emission timing controller 32, the photodetector 35, the drive controller 38, and the image processor 37. Here, when generating an image by the image processor 37, the image to be generated will have distortion when the actual scanning locus of the illumination optical fiber is deviated from an ideal scanning locus. The disclosed apparatus includes a means for suppressing distortion in the scanning locus, as described in below.
The actuator 21 is configured by including an actuator tube 27 fixed inside the insertion portion 23 of the scope 20 via an attachment ring 26; and a flexible fiber holding member 29 and the piezoelectric substrates 28a to 28d disposed inside the actuator tube 27 (see
Further, the illumination lenses 25a, 25b and the detection lens are disposed at the distal end of the tip part 24. The illumination lenses 25a, 25b are configured such that laser light emitted from the emitting end 11c of the illumination optical fiber 11 is substantially converged onto the observation object 50. Further, the detection lens captures light, as signal light, having been converged onto the observation object 50 and reflected, scattered, and refracted by the observation object 50 (light interacted with the observation object 50) or fluorescence, so as to converge and couple the light to the detection optical fiber 12 disposed behind the detection lens. The illumination lens may be formed of one lens or a plurality of other lenses, without being limited to the two-lens configuration.
The piezoelectric substrates 28a to 28d are each formed of, as illustrated in
Described next is a method for driving the disclosed illumination optical fiber 11 according to Embodiment 1. The illumination optical fiber 11 is driven such that the tip end draws a spiral locus, so that the observation object 50 is scanned with illumination light in a spiral scanning pattern.
The optical scanning endoscope apparatus 10, immediately after the production or when not observing the observation object 50, measures a scanning pattern of the emitting end 11c of the illumination optical fiber 11 in order to adjust the scanning locus. Specifically, the tip end of the scope 20 is fixed, and a position sensitive detector (PSD) is disposed at a position where the illumination light emitted from the illumination optical fiber 11 is imaged by the illumination lenses 25a, 26b. The PSD is an optical sensor capable of detecting positions of a spot-like light on a two-dimensional plane. Next, the X-direction driving piezoelectric substrates 28b, 28d are applied with a sin wave voltage waveform to measure a scanning pattern, to thereby obtain data on the inclination of the vibration direction of the emitting end 11c of the illumination optical fiber 11, with respect to the X-direction. Based on the data on the inclination thus measured, an amplification/attenuation factor for the application voltage is calculated for canceling out unnecessary vibration generated in the Y-direction, with respect to the drive voltage of a spiral scan, and the factor is stored in the control device body 30. In general, the amplitude of unnecessary vibration in the Y-direction generated by the vibration in the X-direction is much smaller than the amplitude in the X-direction, and thus, the aforementioned amplification/attenuation factor is obtained as an attenuation factor.
Further, in the optical scanning endoscope apparatus 10, in order to spirally scan the illumination optical fiber 11, voltage waveform data on the Y-direction driving piezoelectric substrate 28a and on the X-direction driving piezoelectric substrates 28b, 28d is stored in advance in a lookup table. A single piezoelectric substrate 28a is used for Y-direction driving, while two piezoelectric substrates 28b and 28d are used for X-direction driving, and thus, the piezoelectric substrate 28a is larger in amplitude of the voltage waveform thereof. Further, the drive controller 38 of
Meanwhile, the voltage waveform generator 38a is connected to the piezoelectric substrate 28c via the delayer 38b and the amplifier/attenuator 38c. The voltage waveform generator 38a outputs the same voltage waveform as that of the drive voltage to be applied to the piezoelectric substrate 28a, in order to drive the piezoelectric substrate 28c. The delayer 38b is configured to delay, by 90°, the phase of the voltage waveform output from the voltage waveform generator 38a, and the amplifier/attenuator 38c is configured to amplify or attenuate the voltage waveform output from the delayer 38b. The amplitude of a voltage waveform is amplified or attenuated based on the aforementioned amplification/attenuation factor calculated in the optical scanning endoscope apparatus 10.
According to the aforementioned configuration and ex-ante adjustment, when observing the observation object 50 by the optical scanning endoscope apparatus 10, the piezoelectric substrate 28a is applied with a voltage having a waveform shown in
As described above, according to Embodiment 1, the optical scanning endoscope apparatus 10 is capable of driving the illumination optical fiber 11 from directions substantially perpendicular to each other and suppressing distortion in the scanning pattern of the optical scanning endoscope apparatus 10. Therefore, there is no need to provide five or more piezoelectric substrates for driving and the fiber holding member 29 is substantially in a square prism shape in section, which can be processed with ease and produced at low cost. Further, forces acted by the piezoelectric substrates 28a to 28d are in directions substantially perpendicular to each other, and thus vibration of the emitting end 11c of the illumination optical fiber 11 can be controlled with ease.
Here, instead of using both the piezoelectric substrates 28b, 28d for X-direction driving, for example, the piezoelectric substrate 28b may be used as an driver element for use in X-direction vibration driving while using the piezoelectric substrate 28d as a second vibration suppression element canceling out at least some vibration components in the X-direction generated by the Y-direction vibration driving of the piezoelectric substrate 28a. In this case, similarly to the aforementioned method of driving the aforementioned piezoelectric substrate 28c, unnecessary vibration components in the X-direction generated by the vibration driving in the Y-direction by the piezoelectric substrate 28a are measured using a PSD, immediately after the production of the optical scanning endoscope apparatus 10 or when not observing the observation object 50. Then, when measuring the observation object 50, a voltage waveform to be applied to the piezoelectric substrate 28b is shifted in phase by 90°, and applies, to the piezoelectric substrate 28d, a signal attenuated in amplitude based on the measurement result. In this manner, unnecessary vibration components in the X-direction can also be suppressed, making it possible to obtain a more precise spiral scanning pattern.
Similarly to Embodiment 1, the optical scanning endoscope apparatus of Embodiment 2 uses PSD to measure, immediately after the production of the optical scanning endoscope apparatus 10 or when not observing the observation object 50, unnecessary vibration components generated in the Y-direction when the X-direction driving piezoelectric substrates 28b, 28d are applied with vibration voltages, calculates the amplification/attenuation factor of an application voltage for cancelling out unnecessary vibration generated in the Y-direction, and stores the factor in the control device body 30. Further, when the unnecessary vibration generated in the Y-direction is phase shifted from the driving voltage applied to the piezoelectric substrates 28b, 28d, such phase shift is also stored in the control device body 30.
Further, the optical scanning endoscope apparatus 10 stores in advance, in a lookup table, voltage waveform data for the Y-direction driving piezoelectric substrate 28a, and for the X-direction driving piezoelectric substrates 28b, 28d, in order to Lissajous scan the illumination optical fiber 11. Further, the drive controller 38 of
According to the aforementioned configuration and ex-ante adjustment, when observing the observation object 50 by the optical scanning endoscope apparatus 10, voltage of a waveform shown in
In contrast, the piezoelectric substrates 42a, 42c are first vibration suppression elements disposed for cancelling out at least some unnecessary vibration components in the Y-direction generated along with the vibration driving in the X-direction by the piezoelectric substrates 41b, 41d, and the piezoelectric substrates 42b, 42d are second vibration suppression elements disposed for at least partially cancelling out unnecessary vibration components in the X-direction generated along with the vibration driving in the Y-direction by the piezoelectric substrates 41a, 41c. The piezoelectric substrates 42a, 42c are applied with signals mutually reversed in phase, and the piezoelectric substrates 42b and 42d are also applied with signals mutually reversed in phase.
Similarly to Embodiment 1 and Embodiment 2, prior to observing an image of the observation object 50, unnecessary vibration components to be generated when the the emitting end 11c of the illumination optical fiber 11 is one-dimensionally driven in the X-direction or the Y-direction using the piezoelectric substrates 41a to 41d for use in vibration driving are measured, and a voltage waveform to be applied to the piezoelectric substrates 41a to 42d for use in vibration suppression is determined based on the measured data. For use in spiral scanning, in image observation of the optical scanning endoscope apparatus 10, a driving voltage waveform of the piezoelectric substrates 41a, 41c is given a phase delay of 90° so as to be attenuated by the attenuation factor previously calculated by the aforementioned measurement, which is applied to the piezoelectric substrates 42a, 42c, to thereby suppress unnecessary vibration components in the Y-direction. Unnecessary vibration components in the X-direction can also be suppressed in a similar manner. Similarly to Embodiment 1 and Embodiment 2, the drive controller 38 has such components as the voltage waveform generator 38a, the delayer 38b, and the amplifier/attenuator 38c, and is connected to each of the piezoelectric substrates 41a to 41d, 42a to 42d via the wiring cables 13, which are however omitted from
According to Embodiment 2, two each of the piezoelectric substrates 41a to 41d opposing to each other are employed for X-direction driving and the Y-direction driving, so that the illumination optical fiber 11 is applied with symmetric forces to provide a stable locus. In addition thereto, the piezoelectric substrates 42a to 42d for cancelling out unnecessary vibrations are further disposed along the illumination optical fiber 11, which allows for suppressing distortion in the scanning pattern.
Note that the disclosed apparatus may be subjected to various modifications and alterations without being limited Embodiments above. For example, an amplifier/attenuator is used in Embodiment 1 and Embodiment 2 for adjusting the amplitude of the piezoelectric substrate for vibration suppression (vibration suppression element), which may be replaced by another piezoelectric substrate with elongation/contraction property to adjust the amplitude, rather than a piezoelectric substrate for driving (driver element).
Further, in the disclosed apparatus, the first driver element is disposed in one of at least two directions perpendicular to each other of the four directions displaced from one another by 90°, while the second driver element is disposed in the other direction, while disposing the first vibration suppression element on the same side or on the opposite side of the first driver element. Accordingly, other than the aforementioned Embodiments, various arrangements are possible for the driver element and the vibration suppression element. For example, Embodiment 1 may also be configured to only include the piezoelectric substrate 28a (first driver element), the piezoelectric substrate 28b (second driver element), and the piezoelectric substrate 28c (first vibration suppression element), without including the piezoelectric substrate 28d. Alternatively, Embodiment 3 may only use the piezoelectric substrate 42a (first vibration suppression element) and the piezoelectric substrate 42d (second vibration suppression element) to cancel out unnecessary vibration components, without including the piezoelectric substrates 42c, 42d.
Further, the disclosed apparatus, which uses piezoelectric substrates as a driver element and a vibration suppression element, may also be applied to an optical scanning endoscope apparatus having an electromagnetic actuator using a magnet and an electromagnetic coil, as means for driving the illumination optical fiber.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
---|---|---|---|
2014-109221 | May 2014 | JP | national |
The present application is a Continuing Application based on International Application PCT/JP2015/002684 filed on May 27, 2015, which, in turn, claims the priority from Japanese Patent Application No. 2014-109221 filed on May 27, 2014, the entire disclosure of these earlier applications being herein incorporated by reference.
Number | Date | Country | |
---|---|---|---|
Parent | PCT/JP2015/002684 | May 2015 | US |
Child | 15359025 | US |