Paper
18 August 1997 Imaging of absorbing inhomogeneities within highly diffusing media
Giovanni Zaccanti, Angelo Sassaroli, Daniele Contini, Fabrizio Martelli, Michele Bassani, Costantino Blumetti, Andrea Ismaelli
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Abstract
A comparison among different techniques used for breast imaging has been carried out by using a Monte Carlo (MC) code to simulate confocal scanning on a diffusing slab containing absorbing inhomogeneities. The MC code evaluated the temporal point spread function (TPSF) for many positions of the source- receiver system with respect to the inhomogeneity. Each TPSF was fitted using the diffusion equation solution for a homogeneous slab. The information contained in each TPSF was summarized in three parameters: the absorption coefficient, the reduced scattering coefficient and the amplitude factor. An image was obtained plotting each of these parameters. To simulate the time gating technique the analytical functions obtained from the fit were used to evaluate the energy received within short gating times. To simulate the frequency domain technique the Fourier transform of the analytical function was calculated. The results obtained from simulations showed that a good estimation of the dimension of an absorbing inhomogeneity can be retrieved from the images obtained either from continuous wave domain, or time domain, or frequency domain measurements. The better contrast and the independence of the image quality on absorption properties of the diffusing medium indicates that the time gating technique is the one producing the best image quality.
© (1997) COPYRIGHT Society of Photo-Optical Instrumentation Engineers (SPIE). Downloading of the abstract is permitted for personal use only.
Giovanni Zaccanti, Angelo Sassaroli, Daniele Contini, Fabrizio Martelli, Michele Bassani, Costantino Blumetti, and Andrea Ismaelli "Imaging of absorbing inhomogeneities within highly diffusing media", Proc. SPIE 2979, Optical Tomography and Spectroscopy of Tissue: Theory, Instrumentation, Model, and Human Studies II, (18 August 1997); https://doi.org/10.1117/12.280218
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KEYWORDS
Optical spheres

Absorption

Monte Carlo methods

Signal attenuation

Image quality

Scattering

Time metrology

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