Pharmacokinetic diffuse fluorescence tomography (DFT) can provide helpful diagnostic information for tumor differentiation and monitoring. Among the methods of achieving pharmacokinetic parameters, adaptive extended Kalman filtering (AEKF) as a nonlinear filter method demonstrates the merits of quantitativeness, noise-robustness, and initialization independence. In this paper, indirect and direct AEKF schemes based on a commonly used two-compartment model were studied to extract pharmacokinetic parameters from simulation data. To assess the effect of metabolic rate on the reconstruction results, a series of numerical simulation experiments with the metabolic time range from 4.16 min to 38 min were carried out and the results obtained by the two schemes were compared. The results demonstrate that when the metabolic time is longer than 18 min, the pharmacokinetic-rate estimates of two schemes are similar; however, when the metabolic time is shorter than 5 min, the pharmacokinetic parameters obtained by the indirect scheme are far from the true value and even unavailable.
Diffuse optical tomography (DOT) is a novel functional imaging technique that has the vital clinical application. Aiming at the problems in DOT technology, we developed a three-wavelength continuous wave DOT system with high sensitivity and temporal resolution by adopting photo-multiple tube and photon counting detection, as well as lock-in technique. To assess the performance of the system, we conducted a series of cylindrical phantom experiments with optical properties that closely match those of human tissue, and obtained the reconstruction images by combining with our developed imaging scheme. The experimental results show that the position and size of the reconstructed targets are accurate, demonstrating the feasibility of the system. Additionally, the sensitivity, quantitativeness and spatial resolution of the imaging system were assessed by varying the target-to-background contrasting absorption contrast and target size. These preliminary results indicate that the system is scientifically capable of subcentimeter resolution imaging of low-contrast the lesion from the normal background.
KEYWORDS: Modulation, Dynamical systems, Imaging systems, Signal detection, Fluorescence tomography, Field programmable gate arrays, Current controlled current source
Pharmacokinetic diffuse fluorescence tomography (DFT) can describe the metabolic processes of fluorescent agents in biomedical tissue and provide helpful information for tumor differentiation. In this paper, a dynamic DFT system was developed by employing digital lock-in-photon-counting with square wave modulation, which predominates in ultra-high sensitivity and measurement parallelism. In this system, 16 frequency-encoded laser diodes (LDs) driven by self-designed light source system were distributed evenly in the imaging plane and irradiated simultaneously. Meanwhile, 16 detection fibers collected emission light in parallel by the digital lock-in-photon-counting module. The fundamental performances of the proposed system were assessed with phantom experiments in terms of stability, linearity, anti-crosstalk as well as images reconstruction. The results validated the availability of the proposed dynamic DFT system.
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