• Journal of Innovative Optical Health Sciences
  • Vol. 3, Issue 2, 109 (2010)
MARIKA A. WALLENBURG1, MIHAELA POP2, MICHAEL F. G. WOOD1, NIRMALYA GHOSH3, GRAHAM A. WRIGHT2, and I. ALEX VITKIN4、*
Author Affiliations
  • 1Ontario Cancer Institute, Division of Biophysics and Bioimaging University Health Network and University of Toronto Department of Medical Biophysics, 610 University Avenue Toronto, Ontario, Canada M5G 2M9
  • 2Department of Medical Biophysics, University of Toronto Sunnybrook Health Sciences Center, 2075 Bayview Avenue Toronto, ON, Canada, M5N 3M5
  • 3IISER Kolkata, Mohanpur Campus, P. O. BCKV Campus Main Office Mohanpur 741252, West Bengal, India
  • 4Ontario Cancer Institute, Division of Biophysics and Bioimaging University Health Network and University of Toronto Departments of Medical Biophysics and Radiation Oncology 610 University Avenue, Toronto, Ontario, Canada M5G 2M9
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    DOI: 10.1142/s1793545810000976 Cite this Article
    MARIKA A. WALLENBURG, MIHAELA POP, MICHAEL F. G. WOOD, NIRMALYA GHOSH, GRAHAM A. WRIGHT, I. ALEX VITKIN. COMPARISON OF OPTICAL POLARIMETRY AND DIFFUSION TENSOR MR IMAGING FOR ASSESSING MYOCARDIAL ANISOTROPY[J]. Journal of Innovative Optical Health Sciences, 2010, 3(2): 109 Copy Citation Text show less

    Abstract

    We have recently proposed an optical method for assessing heart structure that uses polarized light measurement of birefringence as an indicator of tissue anisotropy. The highly aligned nature of healthy cardiac muscle tissue has a detectable effect on the polarization of light, resulting in a measurable phase shift (“retardance”). When this organized tissue structure is perturbed, for example after cardiac infarction (heart attack), scar tissue containing disorganized collagen is formed, causing a decrease in the measured retardance values. However, these are dependent not only on tissue anisotropy, but also on the angle between the tissue’s optical anisotropy direction and the beam interrogating the sample. To remove this experimental ambiguity, we present a method that interrogates the sample at two different incident beam angles, thus yielding enough information to uniquely determine the true magnitude and orientation of the tissue optical anisotropy. We use an infarcted porcine heart model to compare these polarimetryderived anisotropy metrics with those obtained with diffusion tensor magnetic resonance imaging (DT-MRI). The latter yields the anisotropy and the direction of tissue water diffusivity, providing an independent measure of tissue anisotropy. The optical and MR results are thus directly compared in a common ex vivo biological model of interest, yielding reasonable agreement but also highlighting some technique-specific differences.
    MARIKA A. WALLENBURG, MIHAELA POP, MICHAEL F. G. WOOD, NIRMALYA GHOSH, GRAHAM A. WRIGHT, I. ALEX VITKIN. COMPARISON OF OPTICAL POLARIMETRY AND DIFFUSION TENSOR MR IMAGING FOR ASSESSING MYOCARDIAL ANISOTROPY[J]. Journal of Innovative Optical Health Sciences, 2010, 3(2): 109
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