A photoacoustic tomography system (PAT) using virtual point ultrasonic transducers was developed and applied to image a monkey brain. The custom-built transducers provide a 10-fold greater field-of-view (FOV) than finite-aperture unfocused transducers as well as an improved signal-to-noise ratio (SNR) and reduced artifacts rather than negative-lens transducers. Their tangential resolution, radial resolution, and (SNR) improvements were quantified using tissue phantoms. Our PAT system can achieve high uniformity in both resolution (1 mm) and SNR (8) within a large FOV of 6 cm in diameter, even when the imaging objects are enclosed by a monkey skull. The cerebral cortex of a monkey brain was accurately mapped transcranially, through a skull ranging from 2 to 4 mm in thickness. This study demonstrates that PAT can overcome the optical and ultrasound attenuation of a relatively thick skull and can potentially be applied to human neonatal brain imaging. © 2011 Society of Photo-Optical Instrumentation Engineers (SPIE).
CITATION STYLE
Nie, L., Guo, Z., & Wang, L. V. (2011). Photoacoustic tomography of monkey brain using virtual point ultrasonic transducers. Journal of Biomedical Optics, 16(7), 076005. https://doi.org/10.1117/1.3595842
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