Proceedings Volume 8801

Novel Biophotonic Techniques and Applications II

Alex Vitkin, Arjen Amelink
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Proceedings Volume 8801

Novel Biophotonic Techniques and Applications II

Alex Vitkin, Arjen Amelink
View the digital version of this volume at SPIE Digital Libarary.

Volume Details

Date Published: 27 June 2013
Contents: 6 Sessions, 13 Papers, 0 Presentations
Conference: European Conferences on Biomedical Optics 2013
Volume Number: 8801

Table of Contents

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Table of Contents

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  • Front Matter: Volume 8801
  • Shedding Light on Cells
  • Novel Tissue Assessments II
  • Photons, Phonons, and Mechanics
  • Hot Topics and Postdeadline Session
  • Poster Session
Front Matter: Volume 8801
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Front Matter: Volume 8801
This PDF file contains the front matter associated with SPIE Proceedings Volume 8801 including the Title Page, Copyright information, Table of Contents, Introduction, and Conference Committee listing.
Shedding Light on Cells
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Plasmon-resonant gold nanoparticles with variable morphology as optical labels and drug carriers for cytological research
Olga Bibikova, Alexey Popov, Ilya Skovorodkin, et al.
In this work, two types of nanocomposites, silica-coated nano-sea-urchins and silica-coated gold nanostars, were fabricated. CTAB-coated nano-sea-urchins with an average size of about 100 nm demonstrate an absorption peak near 600-700 nm and stability in aqueous suspension. CTAB was exchanged with m-PEG-SH by an intermediate PEG layer. A layer of silica was synthesized on the nano-sea-urchins surface with thickness of about 20 nm. Nanostars with an average size of about 60 nm with a number of thin sharp branches were fabricated and functionalized by PVP to improve their stability. PVP-coated nanostars were used in optical coherence tomography experiments to show their contrasting properties. After silica-coating, stable and monodispersed nanoparticles with silica shell thickness about 60 nm were obtained. Nontoxicity of the silica-coated nanostars at least until the concentration of nanoparticles about 400 μg/mL was showed by fluorescent cell viability assay using propidium iodide. Extinction coefficient of the gold nanostars and nanocomposites was estimated by a spectrophotometer system in collimated transmission regime.
Nonlinear multimode interference coupler for biological sensing
In this study, we propose an all optical sensor based on nonlinearity in a multimode interference coupler. The sensor can be tuned to highest sensitivity in the refractive index ranges sufficient to detect protein- based molecules or other water- soluble chemical or biological materials. The nonlinear regimes show the capability to operate on any choice of materials for slab waveguide even conventional glass. The Kerr nonlinear effect is considered as the nonlinear effect for third order nonlinearity materials; this effect is studied in the multimode waveguide with MPA method that promises to investigate the coupler in small lengths. The visible changes of field profile at output facet in various surrounding layer refractive index show the high sensitivity to the refractive index of surrounding layer that is foundation of introducing a sensor. Also, the result show the high distinguished changes on output intensity in various refractive index of surrounding layer even in conventional glass as a chosen material for coupler. To the best of our knowledge this is the first time that a nonlinear MMI in a few micrometers is proposed as a robustness sensor. In fact, this paper brings a useful and powerful way to progress the all optical sensors based on MMI couplers.
Novel Tissue Assessments II
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Characterization of the bruise healing process using pulsed photothermal radiometry
Luka Vidovič, Matija Milanič, Lise L. Randeberg, et al.
An analytical model of mass diffusion and biochemical transformation kinetics in bruise development and healing process was recently developed in order to simulate bruised skin color at various time points and enable objective determination of the time of injury. However, parameters of the model were not determined directly. Instead, biologically plausable values were applied in prior analyses. Pulsed photothermal radiometry (PPTR) allows noninvasive determination of the laser-induced temperature depth profile in human skin. We have applied this technique to characterize dynamics of extravasated hemoglobin concentration profile evolution. By applying Monte Carlo simulation of laser energy deposition and simulation of PPTR signal, a more exact comparison with measured temperature profiles is possible. We show that PPTR depth profiling can be used to derive rather accurate estimates of the hemoglobin mass diffusivity, hemoglobin degradation time, as well as approximate skin geometry. This enables assessment of the bruise healing dynamics and could offer a valuable addition to existing bruise age determination techniques.
Photons, Phonons, and Mechanics
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Investigation of mechanical property of a cell by optical tweezers
Mechanical property of a cell is investigated from reaction force generated on a particle fixed on a cell by moving with optical tweezers. This system is called as cell palpation system. By using of this system we can measure mechanical property at a desired location on a cell surface just by locating the probe particle with optical tweezers. We have investigated focal adhesion formation through mechanical property measurement after initiation of touching by the probe particle.
Hot Topics and Postdeadline Session
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Analysis of multi-spectral photoplethysmograph biosensors
Multi-spectral photoplethysmograph biosensor intended for analysis of peripheral blood volume pulsations at different vascular depths has been experimentally tested. Light emitting diodes with four different wavelengths were used as the light emitters. A single photodiode with multi-channel signal output processing was used as the light detector. This study analyzed rising time difference between wavelengths at systole maximum, wavelengths relations between systole and diastole peak difference. The proposed methodology is discussed.
Poster Session
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Optimisation of surface enhanced Raman spectroscopy reproducibility for pterin detection
Pterins are a group of biological compounds which have potential for use as a possible cancer diagnostic. This paper considers reproducibility issues using Surface Enhanced Raman Scattering (SERS) for application in pterin detection.
Drag detection and identification by whispering gallery mode optical resonance based sensor
Vladimir A. Saetchnikov, Elina A. Tcherniavskaia, Anton V. Saetchnikov, et al.
Experimental data on optical resonance spectra of whispering gallery modes of dielectric microspheres in antibiotic solutions under varied in wide range concentration are represented. Optical resonance was demonstrated could be detected at a laser power of less than 1 microwatt. Several antibiotics of different generations: Amoxicillin, Azithromycin, Cephazolin, Chloramphenicol, Levofloxacin, Lincomicin Benzylpenicillin, Riphampicon both in deionized water and physiological solution had been used for measurements. Both spectral shift and the structure of resonance spectra were of specific interest in this investigation. Drag identification has been performed by developed multilayer perceptron network. The network topology was designed included: a number of the hidden layers of multilayered perceptron, a number of neurons in each of layers, a method of training of a neural network, activation functions of layers, type and size of a deviation of the received values from required values. For a network training the method of the back propagation error in various modifications has been used. Input vectors correspond to 6 classes of biological substances under investigation. The result of classification was considered as positive when each of the region, representing a certain substance in a space: relative spectral shift of an optical resonance maxima - relative efficiency of excitation of WGM, was singly connected. It was demonstrated that the approach described in the paper can be a promising platform for the development of sensitive, lab-on-chip type sensors that can be used as an express diagnostic tools for different drugs and instrumentation for proteomics, genomics, drug discovery, and membrane studies.
Three-dimensional modeling of surface plasmon resonance based biosensor
The surface plasmon resonance (SPR) is one of the most attractive and precise enabling mechanism for sensors in biomedical applications. Conventional biological experiments are performed manually, time consuming intervention and expensive interconnection techniques. This paper simulates three dimensional behavior of magnetic and electric fields of light coupled into a SPR mode propagating along a thin gold layer surrounded by symmetric dielectric layers. This study successfully illustrates the three-dimensional simulation of surface plasmon wave using finite element method in COMSOL Multiphysics suit.
Near infrared FRET using wide-field fluorescence lifetime imaging in live animals
Lingling Zhao, Ken Abe, Margarida Barroso, et al.
One of the challenges in anti-cancer drug delivery systems is to quantitatively discriminate non-specific receptorindependent tumor accumulation from receptor-mediated uptake into the tumor cells. To overcome this challenge, we develop a new near infrared fluorescence resonance energy transfer fluorescence lifetime imaging (NIR FRET FLIM) technique with wide-field illumination strategies to validate and characterize cellular uptake in both cancer cells and normal cells with different donor-acceptor ratios in vitro and in vivo. Our results demonstrate that NIR FRET FLIM can quantitatively distinguish receptor-bound from unbound donor in live animals with high sensitivity and high accuracy. Thus, it has a great potential for the quantitative detection of targeted delivery systems for diagnostic and therapeutic use.
Efficient algorithm for the temporal and spatial based calculation of speckle contrast
We demonstrate an efficient algorithm for the temporal and spatial based calculation of the laser speckle contrast analysis (LASCA) for the imaging of blood flow that reduces the numerical complexity of necessary calculations, facilitates a multicore implementation of the speckle analysis and enables an independence of temporal or spatial resolution and SNR. The new algorithm was evaluated for both spatial and temporal based analysis of speckle patterns with different image sizes and incorporated pixels as sequential and multi-core code. The improvement is about a factor of 5 and can be increased to about a factor of 15 for multi-core computers. This allows an online-analysis of larger speckle images or at a higher frame rate.
High-resolution deep-tissue optical imaging using anti-Stokes phosphors
We report on the high-resolution deep-tissue imaging using novel water-dispersible upconversion nanoparticles (UCNPs) β-NaYF4:Yb3+:Tm3+. Luminescence from the UCNP embedded into tissue-mimicking phantoms at the depth of 4 mm epi-illuminated with 975-nm laser radiation was detected. Fiber-optic detection shows 2-times better resolution compared with that obtained using CCD-based imaging modality. The conversion efficiency of upconversion particles and their cytotoxicity to HeLa cells were also investigated and reported.
Active illumination for wide-field time-resolved fluorescence imaging
Lingling Zhao, Ken Abe, Margarida Barroso, et al.
The large dynamic range of fluorescence emission collected is one of the major challenges in wide-field fluorescence lifetime imaging. To overcome this challenge, we developed an active illumination strategy to acquire optimal fluorescence signals over the sample imaged even in the presence of large fluorophore concentration distributions. We validated the stability of our approach in a multi-well plate setting with fluorophore concentrations ranging <2 orders of magnitude. We report the ability of our method to retrieve accurately the lifetime over this concentration range based on optimized wide-field data. Our results demonstrate that active wide-field illumination can improve the signal-to-noise ratio and weak-signal sensitivity for enhanced accuracy of fluorescence decay curve fitting and lifetime estimation at high acquisition speed.