Fiber Optic RS-OCT probe

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FIBER OPTIC RS-OCT PROBE John Acevedo Kelly Thomas Chris Miller Advisors: Dr. Patil Dr. Mahadevan-

description

Fiber Optic RS-OCT probe. Advisors: Dr. Patil Dr. Mahadevan -Jansen. John Acevedo Kelly Thomas Chris Miller. Epithelial cancer types. Epithelium – cells that line hollow organs and make up the outer surface of the body (skin) Basal Cell Carcinoma: - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

Transcript of Fiber Optic RS-OCT probe

Page 1: Fiber Optic RS-OCT probe

FIBER OPTIC RS-OCT PROBE

John Acevedo Kelly Thomas Chris MillerAdvisors: Dr. PatilDr. Mahadevan-Jansen

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Epithelial cancer types Epithelium – cells that line hollow organs and make

up the outer surface of the body (skin) Basal Cell Carcinoma:

1 million new cases are diagnosed each year in the U.S. The basal cells line the deepest layer of the epidermis

Squamous Cell Carcinoma: More than 700,000 new cases are diagnosed every year. Chronic exposure to sunlight is the cause of most

squamous cell carcinoma and basal cell carcinoma. Optical imaging such as Optical Coherence

Tomography (OCT) can noninvasively serve as a diagnostic and monitoring tool of epithelial cancers, and can evaluate therapeutic responses

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RS and OCT are complimentary

Raman Spectroscopy Strengths

Biochemical Specificity

Limitations No spatial Information Susceptible to

sampling error

Optical Coherence Tomography Strengths

Micron-scale structural resolution

Real-time imaging speeds

Limitations Insensitive to tissue

biochemical composition

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Procedure1. Turn on OCT component 2. Acquire tomographical map3. Detect area of interest4. Turn off OCT component5. Turn on RS component6. Acquire biochemical composition of

area of interest7. Turn off RS component

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Dr. Patil’s RS-OCT probe

RSOD1310 nm C

BD

BPF

AI/AODAQ

50/50

785 nmEC

LS

Spectrograph

CCD

Drive Waveform

FS

Sample

ProbeGC

Raman Subsystem

OCT Subsystem

RSOD1310 nm C

BD

BPF

AI/AODAQ

50/50

785 nmEC

LS

Spectrograph

CCD

Drive Waveform

FS

Sample

ProbeGC

Raman Subsystem

OCT Subsystem

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Reason for fiber optic RS-OCT probe Improve detection and diagnosis of cancer Hand held device will facilitate the use RS-

OCT probe A fiber optic probe will decrease the size of

the current probe Potential endoscopic use,

non-invasive Cost effective

Current skin probe~$4000 Our design ~$700

Product Price

Fiber Optics $100

Platinum Alloy

coil

$100

Focusing Lens $200

Polymer block $200Electrodes $100

All Products $700

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Problem Statement

5”

8”

Miniaturizing sample arm of current RS-OCT probe

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Design Criteria Meet existing RS-OCT probe

performance and functionality Decrease size of probe to < 1 cm in

diameter Reach a scan rate of RS and OCT to 4

frames per second Reach a scan range of at least 3 mm depth OCT sensitivity of -95 dB RS collection efficiency of 10 seconds Spot size for OCT should be < 50 microns

Determined by depth of focus

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RS and OCT existing designs

Raman Spectroscopy Current Probe

Design Direct light source

surrounded by 7 detection fibers

Optical Coherence Tomography Current Probe Design

Forward facing Bundle-based MEMS mirror

Spectrograph

CCD

785 nm

7300 mmfibers

BPfilter

Notchfilters

Psample = 80 mWtacq < 5 sec

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Challenges Quality compensation from combining RS and

OCT RS requires narrow band of light source and

multi-mode fibers for optimum specificity OCT requires broad band of light source and

single-mode fibers for optimum specificity Develop scanning technique for the OCT

probe in such a small area Spatial registration of RS and OCT data sets Obtaining material for tests

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Current Design Forward facing Electrostatic scanning probe for OCT

component Located in the center

Fiber-optic array for RS component

300 um

270 um

125 um inner diam

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Electrostatic OCT component

125 µm diameter single mode fiber illuminates and detects elastic scattering in the area of interest

Fiber placed in 250 µm diameter platinum alloy coil Placed in the center of 400 µm diameter lumen of a

triple lumen catheter Two peripheral lumens contain 270 µm diameter wires

One serves as electrode and the other serves as ground leads

Driven by DC power supply, <5 µA, 1-3 kV 1310 nm light source - broadband

Munce, N.R. and Yang, V.X.D. et al. (2008).

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Electrostatic OCT component Electrostatic driven cantilever to create a compact, wide

angle, rapid scanning forward viewing probe1. Cantilever is neutral and is attracted to electrode2. Cantilever touches electrode and acquires the same

potential3. Charge dissipates through the polymer from the

cantilever and repels from electrode4. Cantilever touches ground and becomes neutral again5. Process restarts enacting a scanning motion

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Fiber Optic Array RS Component

Multi-mode fibers (200 µm)set on either side of the OCT scanning fiber

One narrow band (785 nm) light sources on one side

Light source Collection

Highest concentration of collection

OCT

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Future work Build prototype Test prototype Evaluate effectiveness Improve design by adding more

collection fibers Modifying SolidWorks 3D design Prepare poster presentation

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Current Progress Voltage source and optical fibers have

been obtained Dissipative Polymer has been ordered Platinum coil or suitable replacement is

needed Find a suitable replacement for

dissipative polymer if polymer is not effective Capacitor, resistor, inductor

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References Patil, C.A. (2009). Development

combined raman spectroscopy-optical coherence tomograpgy for the detection of skin cancer. Disertation submitted to faculty of Graduate school of Vanderbilt University.

Munce, N.R. and Yang, V.X.D. et al.(2008). Electrostatic forward-viewing scanning probe for doppler optical coherence tomography using a dissipative polymer catheter. Optical letters, 33, 7, 657-60.

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Questions?

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Specific Aims1. Combine RS-OCT techniques into a fiber

optic device to replace sample arm of current probe

2. Maximize Raman detection time efficiency

3. Integrate multi-mode and single-mode fibers into probe without compromising RS-OCT functionality

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Raman Spectroscopy Inelastic scattering (Stokes

and Anti-Stokes) Occurs 1 in 10 million

compared to elastic Frequency of light scattered

from a molecule dependent on structural characteristics of molecular bonds

Able to determine malignant from non-malignant tissue

Gives no spatial information All sorts of epithelial diseases

Raman Shift (cm-1) = f ( ) – f ( )

n1n0

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Optical Coherence Tomography (OCT)

Sensitivity to microstructural features of disease

Measures tissue reflectivity as function of depth Detects elastic scattering

Ability to image over transverse areas of tissue of greater than 5mm

Micron scale resolution (>25µm)

Real-time speed