Abstract
Atherosclerosis is among the most widespread cardiovascular diseases and one of the leading cause of death in the Western World. Characterization of arterial tissue in atherosclerotic condition is extremely interesting from the diagnostic point of view. Routinely used diagnostic methods, such as histopathological examination, are limited to morphological analysis of the examined tissues, whereas an exhaustive characterization requires a morpho-functional approach. Non-linear microscopy techniques have the potential to bridge this gap by providing morpho-functional information in a label-free way. Here we employed multiple non-linear microscopy techniques, including CARS, TPF, and SHG to provide intrinsic optical contrast from various tissue components in both arterial wall and atherosclerotic plaques. CARS and TPF microscopy were used to respectively image lipid depositions within plaques and elastin in the arterial wall. Cholesterol deposition in the lumen and collagen in the arterial wall were selectively imaged by SHG microscopy and distinguished by forward-backward SHG ratio. Image pattern analysis allowed characterizing collagen organization in different tissue regions. The presented method has the potential to find a stable place in clinical setting as well as to be applied in vivo in the near future.
© 2013 SPIE
PDF ArticleMore Like This
Riccardo Cicchi, Enrico Baria, Christian Matthäus, Marta Lange, Annika Lattermann, Bernhard R. Brehm, Jürgen Popp, and Francesco S. Pavone
95360N European Conference on Biomedical Optics (ECBO) 2015
E. Baria, R. Cicchi, G. Nesi, D. Massi, and F. S. Pavone
1041405 European Conference on Biomedical Optics (ECBO) 2017
Christian Matthäus, Gero Bergner, Christoph Krafft, Benjamin Dietzek, Bernd F. M. Romeike, Berhard R. Brehm, and Jürgen Popp
80871D European Conference on Biomedical Optics (ECBO) 2011