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1.
Sovrem Tekhnologii Med ; 14(2): 26-38, 2022.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37065422

RESUMEN

The aim of the study: We compare the effectiveness of multimodal optical coherence tomography (MM OCT) in the traditional structural OCT mode and the OCT elastography (OCE) mode in addressing two clinically important tasks: (1) detecting groups of tumor cells at surgical margins during breast-сonserving surgery (BСS) in breast cancer (BC) and (2) identifying breast tumor margins. The obtained results were correlated with corresponding histological sections. Materials and Methods: The study was performed on 100 surgical margin samples (top, bottom, medial, and lateral - four samples from each patient in total) obtained from 25 patients with BC who underwent BCS (lumpectomy), and on 25 postoperative tumor samples (to determine tumor margins). With MM OCT method, we visually and numerically assessed the scattering (level and depth of OCT signal penetration) and elastic (stiffness values, or Young's modulus (kPa)) properties of the tumor and non-tumor breast tissue and the obtained values were compared with the results of postoperative histological examination. Results: In 4 surgical margin samples (out of 100), with the OCE method we identified groups of histologically confirmed tumor cells ("positive" resection margins) at the distance of about 5 mm from the visible tumor margin. The identified zones were larger than 0.5 mm with stiffness of more than 400 kPa in all these cases. However, the structural OCT could not identify these groups of tumors and they were not distinguishable from the surrounding fibrous tissue.In the areas of tumor into non-tumor tissue transition, structural OCT images detected tumor margins only if they were adjacent to adipose tissue and did not detect them if there were adjacent to non-tumor fibrous tissue. OCE images with high stiffness values (more than 400 kPa) and high contrast showed a clear tumor margin with both adipose and fibrous tissue. Conclusion: The study demonstarets the potential of MM OCT, particularly its OCE mode, as a real-time method for intraoperative tumor margin and surgical margin assessment in BCS. OCE images compared to structural OCT images visualize higher contrast between different types of breast tissue (adipose tissue, fibrous stroma, hyalinized stroma, tumor cell clusters), as well as more accurate identification of the tumor border and detection of small groups of tumor cells at surgical margins. An algorithm for intraoperative MM OCT examination of the state of the resection margin is proposed in accordance with standard clinical guidelines for achieving clean surgical margins in breast cancer patients.


Asunto(s)
Neoplasias de la Mama , Neoplasias Mamarias Animales , Animales , Humanos , Femenino , Mastectomía Segmentaria/métodos , Márgenes de Escisión , Tomografía de Coherencia Óptica/métodos , Neoplasias de la Mama/diagnóstico por imagen , Neoplasias de la Mama/cirugía , Neoplasias de la Mama/patología , Mama/patología , Neoplasias Mamarias Animales/cirugía
2.
Ophthalmol Sci ; 1(4): 100058, 2021 Dec.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36246948

RESUMEN

Purpose: To compare noncontact acoustic microtapping (AµT) OCT elastography (OCE) with destructive mechanical tests to confirm corneal elastic anisotropy. Design: Ex vivo laboratory study with noncontact AµT-OCE followed by mechanical rheometry and extensometry. Participants: Inflated cornea of whole-globe porcine eyes (n = 9). Methods: A noncontact AµT transducer was used to launch propagating mechanical waves in the cornea that were imaged with phase-sensitive OCT at physiologically relevant controlled pressures. Reconstruction of both Young's modulus (E) and out-of-plane shear modulus (G) in the cornea from experimental data was performed using a nearly incompressible transversely isotropic (NITI) medium material model assuming spatial isotropy of corneal tensile properties. Corneal samples were excised and parallel plate rheometry was performed to measure shear modulus, G. Corneal samples were then subjected to strip extensometry to measure the Young's modulus, E. Main Outcome Measures: Strong corneal anisotropy was confirmed with both AµT-OCE and mechanical tests, with the Young's (E) and shear (G) moduli differing by more than an order of magnitude. These results show that AµT-OCE can quantify both moduli simultaneously with a noncontact, noninvasive, clinically translatable technique. Results: Mean of the OCE measured moduli were E = 12 ± 5 MPa and G = 31 ± 11 kPa at 5 mmHg and E = 20 ± 9 MPa and G = 61 ± 29 kPa at 20 mmHg. Tensile testing yielded a mean Young's modulus of 1 MPa - 20 MPa over a strain range of 1% to 7%. Shear storage and loss modulus (G'/G'') measured with rheometry was approximately 82/13 ± 12/4 kPa at 0.2 Hz and 133/29 ± 16/3 kPa at 16 Hz (0.1% strain). Conclusions: The cornea is confirmed to be a strongly anisotropic elastic material that cannot be characterized with a single elastic modulus. The NITI model is the simplest one that accounts for the cornea's incompressibility and in-plane distribution of lamellae. AµT-OCE has been shown to be the only reported noncontact, noninvasive method to measure both elastic moduli. Submillimeter spatial resolution and near real-time operation can be achieved. Quantifying corneal elasticity in vivo will enable significant innovation in ophthalmology, helping to develop personalized biomechanical models of the eye that can predict response to ophthalmic interventions.

3.
J Biophotonics ; 12(3): e201800250, 2019 03.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-30417604

RESUMEN

Moderate heating of such collagenous tissues as cornea and cartilages by infra-red laser (IR laser) irradiation is an emerging technology for nondestructive modification of the tissue shape and microstructure for a variety of applications in ophthalmology, otolaryngology and so on. Postirradiation high-resolution microscopic examination indicates the appearance of microscopic either spheroidal or crack-like narrow pores depending on the tissue type and irradiation regime. Such examinations usually require special tissue preparation (eg, staining, drying that affect microstructure themselves) and are mostly suitable for studying individual pores, whereas evaluation of their averaged parameters, especially in situ, is challenging. Here, we demonstrate the ability of optical coherence tomography (OCT) to visualize areas of pore initiation and evaluate their averaged properties by combining visualization of residual irradiation-induced tissue dilatation and evaluation of the accompanying Young-modulus reduction by OCT-based compressional elastography. We show that the averaged OCT-based data obtained in situ fairly well agree with the microscopic examination results. The results obtained develop the basis for effective and safe applications of novel nondestructive laser technologies of tissue modification in clinical practice. PICTURE: Elastographic OCT-based images of an excised rabbit eye cornea subjected to thermomechanical laser-assisted reshaping. Central panel shows resultant cumulative dilatation in cornea after moderate (~45-50°C) pulse-periodic heating by an IR laser together with distribution of the inverse Young modulus 1/E before (left) and after (right) IR irradiation. Significant modulus decrease in the center of irradiated region is caused by initiated micropores. Their parameters can be extracted by analyzing the elastographic images.


Asunto(s)
Colágeno/química , Colágeno/metabolismo , Diagnóstico por Imagen de Elasticidad , Fenómenos Mecánicos , Temperatura , Animales , Fenómenos Biomecánicos , Módulo de Elasticidad , Conejos , Esclerótica/diagnóstico por imagen , Esclerótica/metabolismo
4.
J Biophotonics ; 10(11): 1450-1463, 2017 Nov.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-28493426

RESUMEN

We describe the use of elastographic processing in phase-sensitive optical coherence tomography (OCT) for visualizing dynamics of strain and tissue-shape changes during laser-induced photothermal corneal reshaping, for applications in the emerging field of non-destructive and non-ablative (non-LASIK) laser vision correction. The proposed phase-processing approach based on fairly sparse data acquisition enabled rapid data processing and near-real-time visualization of dynamic strains. The approach avoids conventional phase unwrapping, yet allows for mapping strains even for significantly supra-wavelength inter-frame displacements of scatterers accompanied by multiple phase-wrapping. These developments bode well for real-time feedback systems for controlling the dynamics of corneal deformation with 10-100 ms temporal resolution, and for suitably long-term monitoring of resultant reshaping of the cornea. In ex-vivo experiments with excised rabbit eyes, we demonstrate temporal plastification of cornea that allows shape changes relevant for vision-correction applications without affecting its transparency. We demonstrate OCT's ability to detect achieving of threshold temperatures required for tissue plastification and simultaneously characterize transient and cumulative strain distributions, surface displacements, and scattering tissue properties. Comparison with previously used methods for studying laser-induced reshaping of cartilaginous tissues and numerical simulations is performed.


Asunto(s)
Córnea/diagnóstico por imagen , Rayos Láser , Estrés Mecánico , Tomografía de Coherencia Óptica/métodos , Córnea/citología , Temperatura
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