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Open AccessJournal ArticleDOI

Biomedical photoacoustic imaging

Paul C. Beard
- 06 Aug 2011 - 
- Vol. 1, Iss: 4, pp 602-631
TLDR
The underlying physical principles of the technique, its practical implementation, and a range of clinical and preclinical applications are reviewed.
Abstract
Photoacoustic (PA) imaging, also called optoacoustic imaging, is a new biomedical imaging modality based on the use of laser-generated ultrasound that has emerged over the last decade. It is a hybrid modality, combining the high-contrast and spectroscopic-based specificity of optical imaging with the high spatial resolution of ultrasound imaging. In essence, a PA image can be regarded as an ultrasound image in which the contrast depends not on the mechanical and elastic properties of the tissue, but its optical properties, specifically optical absorption. As a consequence, it offers greater specificity than conventional ultrasound imaging with the ability to detect haemoglobin, lipids, water and other light-absorbing chomophores, but with greater penetration depth than purely optical imaging modalities that rely on ballistic photons. As well as visualizing anatomical structures such as the microvasculature, it can also provide functional information in the form of blood oxygenation, blood flow and temperature. All of this can be achieved over a wide range of length scales from micrometres to centimetres with scalable spatial resolution. These attributes lend PA imaging to a wide variety of applications in clinical medicine, preclinical research and basic biology for studying cancer, cardiovascular disease, abnormalities of the microcirculation and other conditions. With the emergence of a variety of truly compelling in vivo images obtained by a number of groups around the world in the last 2–3 years, the technique has come of age and the promise of PA imaging is now beginning to be realized. Recent highlights include the demonstration of whole-body small-animal imaging, the first demonstrations of molecular imaging, the introduction of new microscopy modes and the first steps towards clinical breast imaging being taken as well as a myriad of in vivo preclinical imaging studies. In this article, the underlying physical principles of the technique, its practical implementation, and a range of clinical and preclinical applications are reviewed.

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Citations
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Thermo‐plasmonics: using metallic nanostructures as nano‐sources of heat

TL;DR: In this paper, the physics of heat generation in metal nanoparticles is described, under both continuous and pulsed illumination, and numerical and experimental methods that have been developed to further understand and engineer plasmonic-assisted heating processes on the nanoscale.
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Contrast agents for molecular photoacoustic imaging

TL;DR: The physical, chemical and biochemical characteristics of the existing photoacoustic contrast agents are critically reviewed, highlighting key applications and present challenges for molecular PAI.
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Photoacoustic imaging in biomedicine

Xu Xiao
- 01 Jan 2008 - 
TL;DR: In this paper, the authors provide an overview of the rapidly developing field of photoacoustic imaging, which is a promising method for visualizing biological tissues with optical absorbers, compared with optical imaging and ultrasonic imaging.
Journal ArticleDOI

Quantitative spectroscopic photoacoustic imaging: a review.

TL;DR: This topic, known as quantitative photoacoustic imaging, is reviewed here and the inverse problems involved are described, their nature is discussed, proposed solution techniques and their limitations are explained, and the remaining unsolved challenges are introduced.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

Optical Constants of Water in the 200-nm to 200-microm Wavelength Region.

TL;DR: Extinction coefficients k(lambda) for water at 25 degrees C were determined through a broad spectral region by manually smoothing a point by point graph of k( lambda) vs wavelength lambda that was plotted for data obtained from a review of the scientific literature on the optical constants of water.
Journal ArticleDOI

Photoacoustic imaging in biomedicine

TL;DR: An overview of the rapidly expanding field of photoacoustic imaging for biomedical applications can be found in this article, where a number of imaging techniques, including depth profiling in layered media, scanning tomography with focused ultrasonic transducers, image forming with an acoustic lens, and computed tomography using unfocused transducers are introduced.
Journal ArticleDOI

Functional photoacoustic microscopy for high-resolution and noninvasive in vivo imaging

TL;DR: Functional photoacoustic microscopy (fPAM) is reported, which provides multiwavelength imaging of optical absorption and permits high spatial resolution beyond this depth limit with a ratio of maximum imaging depth to depth resolution greater than 100.
Journal ArticleDOI

Noninvasive laser-induced photoacoustic tomography for structural and functional in vivo imaging of the brain

TL;DR: In vivo noninvasive transdermal and transcranial imaging of the structure and function of rat brains by means of laser-induced photoacoustic tomography (PAT) is reported, which retains intrinsic optical contrast characteristics while taking advantage of the diffraction-limited high spatial resolution of ultrasound.
Journal ArticleDOI

Multiscale photoacoustic microscopy and computed tomography.

TL;DR: PAT holds the promise of in vivo imaging at multiple length scales ranging from subcellular organelles to organs with the same contrast origin, an important application in multiscale systems biology research.
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