Scattering coefficients of mice organs categorized pathologically by spectral domain optical coherence tomography

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Abstract

Differences in tissue density cause a variety of scattering coefficients. To quantify optical coherence tomography (OCT) images for diagnosis, the tissue's scattering coefficient is estimated by curve fitting the OCT signals to a confocal single backscattering mode. The results from a group of 30 mice show that the scattering coefficients of bone, skin, liver, brain, testis, and spleen can be categorized into three groups: a scattering coefficient between 1.947 and 2.134 mm-1: bone and skin; a scattering coefficient between 1.303 and 1.461 mm-1: liver and brain; a scattering coefficient between 0.523 and 0.634 mm-1: testis and spleen. The results indicate that the scattering coefficient is tissue specific and could be used in tissue diagnosis. © 2014 Q. Q. Zhang et al.

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Zhang, Q. Q., Wu, X. J., Wang, C., Zhu, S. W., Wang, Y. L., Gao, B. Z., & Yuan, X. C. (2014). Scattering coefficients of mice organs categorized pathologically by spectral domain optical coherence tomography. BioMed Research International, 2014. https://doi.org/10.1155/2014/471082

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