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Lecture 25 Review Medical Optics and Lasers • Application of optical methods to medicine • Why optical methods? – Non-invasive – No side-effects – High resolution – Functional information – Real-time information – Cost effective – Portable Medical Optics and Lasers • Optical methods based on interactions of light with matter (biological sample) – Basic Principles – Absorption – Scattering • Multiple scattering/Diffusion • Single scattering – – – – Fluorescence Microscopy Optical Coherence Tomography Photodynamic therapy Light as a wave wavelength (meters) Period k 2 propagation vector(converts distance to angle ) period (sec onds ) 1 c 2 time z, t o cost kz frequency (cycles / s or Hz ) 2 angular frequency (converts time to angle Phase=f=t-kz Monochromatic (only one wavelength/frequency) waves traveling in phase Monochromatic (only one wavelength/frequency) waves traveling out of phase Matter: Basic principles • The basic unit of matter is the atom • Atoms consist of a nucleus surrounded by electron(s) • It is impossible to know exactly both the location and velocity of a particle at the same time • Describe the probability of finding a particle within a given space in terms of a wave function, y Particle in a box • The particle confined in a one-dimensional box of length a, represents a simple case, with well-defined wavefunctions and corresponding energy levels 2 nx y n ( x) sin a a 2 2 nh En 2 8ma • n can be any positive integer, 1,2,3…, and represents the number of nodes (places where the wavefunction is zero) • Only discrete energy levels are available to the particle in a box----energy is quantized Atomic orbitals: Quantum numbers • Principal quantum number, n –Has integral values of 1,2,3…… and is related to size and energy of the orbital • Angular quantum number, l –Can have values of 0 to n-1 for each value of n and relates to the angular momentum of the electron in an orbital; it defines the shape of the orbital • Magnetic quantum number, ml –Can have integral values between l and - l, including zero and relates to the orientation in space of the angular momentum. • Electron spin quantum number, ms –This quantum number only has two values: ½ and –½ and relates to spin orientation Molecular orbitals • Molecular orbitals (chemical bonds) originate from the overlap of occupied atomic orbitals • Bonding molecular orbitals – are lower in energy than corresponding atomic orbitals (stabilizes the molecule) • Anti-bonding orbitals – are higher in energy than corresponding atomic orbitals and destabilizes the molecule s bonds – involve overlapping s and p orbitals along the line joining the nuclei of the bond-forming atoms bonds – involve p and d orbitals overlapping above and below the line joining the nuclei of the bond-forming atoms Hybrid orbitals and conjugated bonds • The four 2p orbitals can combine to form these orbitals, arranged according to energy, with the lowest energy orbital at the bottom. • • Can you think of a set of wavefunctions that may describe what is going on? These are similar to the wavefunctions we got for a particle in the box, with the length of the box corresponding to the length of the carbon chain Principles of laser operation • Stimulated emission • Population inversion • Laser cavity – Main components – Gain and logarithmic losses – Two vs. three vs. four-level systems – Properties of laser light – Homojunction/heterojunction semiconductor lasers Cell and Tissue basics • Basic components of a cell – – – – – Nucleus Mitochondria Lysosomes ER Golgi • Basic components of epithelial tissues – Types of epithelia – Connective tissue – Basement membrane Light-tissue interactions Optical methods are based on different types of light-matter interactions to provide structural, biochemical, physiological and morphological information • scattering – elastic scattering • multiple scattering • single scattering Epithelium • absorption • fluorescence Connective Tissue Tissue optical properties • There are two main tissue optical properties which characterize light-tissue interactions and determine therapeutic or diagnostic outcome: – Absorption coefficient: ma (cm-1) • • • ma=sa*Na =(A/L)*ln10 sa=atomic absorption cross section (cm2) Na=# of absorbing molecules/unit volume (cm-3) A=Absorbance L=sample length – Scattering coefficient: ms (cm-1) ms=ss*Ns ss=atomic scattering cross section (cm2) • Ns=# of scattering molecules/unit volume (cm-3) Tissue absorption Major tissue absorbers include: Hemoglobin, lipids (beta carotene), melanin, water, proteins Oxy and deoxy hemoglobin have distinct spectra. Optical measurements can provide information on tissue oxygenation, oxygen consumption, blood hemodynamics Tissue scattering spectra exhibit a weak wavelength dependence Structural proteins constitute major tissue scattering centers. Cell nuclei and membrane rich organelles (e.g. mitochondria) also scatter light Fluorescence spectra provide a rich source of information on tissue state 1.5 450 FAD Excitation (nm) 1 Protein expression 400 NADH 350 Collagen 300 Trp 350 400 450 0.5 Structural integrity 0 Metabolic activity -0.5 500 550 600 -1 Emission (nm) Courtesy of Nimmi Ramanujam, University of Wisconsin, Madison Which optical method to use? • Three main questions: – What is the required depth of penetration? – What is the acceptable resolution? – What type of information is needed? Imaging methods Resolution (log) Diffuse optical tomography and spectroscopy 1 mm 100 mm 10 mm OCT Confocal/multi-photon microscopy Standard 1 mm microsc Penetration depth (log) 100 nm 4-Pi/STED 1 mm 10 mm 100 mm 1 mm 1 cm 10 cm Spectroscopic methods: Functional information • Diffuse reflectance – – – Penetration depth: microns to centimeters depending on wavelength, souce/detector separation, light delivery/collection geometry Resolution not well defined Absorption • • • • – Scattering • • • Tissue oxygen saturation Arterial/venus oxygen saturation Oxygen consumption Hemodynamics Structural changes of the matrix May be nuclear changes Light Scattering – – Penetration depth: microns to hundreds of microns depending on how highly scattering is the sample Inelastic scattering (Raman) – Elastic scattering • • Information: biochemical composition Information – – • Resolution – • Size distribution of major cell scattering centers (e.g. nuclei, mitochondria) Cell/tissue organization Potential to detect size changes on the order of 100 nanometers Fluorescence – – Penetration depth: microns to centimeters depending on implementation, i.e. wavelength, sample optical properties, source/detector geometry Endogenous fluorescence • • – – Cell and tissue biochemistry (NADH/FAD, tryptophan, porphyrins, oxidized lipids Tissue structure (collagen, elastin) Induced fluorescent protein expression (molecular specificity) Fluorescent tags • • Antibodies (antigen expression) Molecular beacons (enzyme activity) Diffuse optical tomography and spectroscopy • Applications – Breast cancer detection – Brain function – Oxygen consumption by muscles – Arthritis – atherosclerosis – Pulse oximeter – Jauntice (billirubin) test for neonates Light scattering spectroscopy • Cancer detection • Detection of pre-cancerous changes – Barrett’s esophagus – Uterine cervix – Oral cancers • Biopsy guidance • Non-invasive patient monitoring Optical coherence tomography • Non-invasive detection of morphological changes • Applications – Cancer detection – Eye diseases – Atherosclerosis – Developmental biology Raman scattering • Applications – Atherosclerosis – Cancer detection – Blood composition – Bacterial detection Tissue fluorescence • Applications – Cancer detection • Pre-cancer detection • Guide to biopsy • Patient monitoring – Atherosclerosis detection – Bacterial infection (?) Microscopy • Cell microscopy – Understand basic cell functions in healthy and disease states – Understand role of specific proteins and cell component interactions • Tissue/intravital microscopy – Understand cell matrix interactions that govern disease development, progression and regression • Drug/therapy development and optimization • Early detection Multi-modality optical detection • Goal: Acquire morphological and biochemical information to achieve more sensitive/specific detection • Combined use of fluorescence, diffuse reflectance and light scattering • Combined use of Raman and fluorescence • Combined use of OCT and fluorescence • Combined use of reflectance and fluorescence imaging Photodynamic therapy • Example of light-based therapeutic method • Light used to achieve cytotoxicity • Optical methods can also be used to tailor dosimetry to patient and monitor/predict therapeutic efficacy • Used for treating a variety of conditions from cancer to acne to atherosclerosis Optical methods are a powerful tool for understanding human health and improving disease detection and treatment 20 0 18 0.5 mm 1 Enlarged Nuclei, % 40-50 30-40 20-30 10-20 16 14 0 0.5 1 mm Adenoma 1.5 Non-dysplastic mucosa x (cm) 1.5 12 10 8 6 4 2 0 0 2 4 6 8 y (cm) 10