Fighting against fast speckle decorrelation for light focusing inside live tissue by photon frequency shifting
Abstract
Light focusing inside live tissue by digital optical phase conjugation (DOPC) has drawn increasing interest due to its potential biomedical applications in optogenetics, microsurgery, phototherapy, and deep-tissue imaging. However, fast physiological motions in a live animal, including blood flow and respiratory motions, produce undesired photon perturbation and thus inevitably deteriorate the performance of light focusing. Here, we develop a photon-frequency-shifting DOPC method to fight against fast physiological motions by switching the states of a guide star at a distinctive frequency. Therefore, the photons tagged by the guide star are well detected at the specific frequency, separating them from the photons perturbed by fast motions. Light focusing was demonstrated in both phantoms in vitro and mice in vivo with substantially improved focusing contrast. This work puts a new perspective on light focusing inside live tissue and promises wide biomedical applications.
Additional Information
© 2020 American Chemical Society. Received: January 7, 2020; Published: February 26, 2020. This work was financially supported by the National Institutes of Health (NIH), Grants CA186567 (NIH Director's Transformative Research Award), NS090579, and NS099717. The authors declare the following competing financial interest(s): L. V. Wang has a financial interest in Microphotoacoustics, Inc., CalPACT, LLC, and Union Photoacoustic Technologies, Ltd., which, however, did not support this work. The other authors declare no competing financial interests.Attached Files
Accepted Version - nihms-1589895.pdf
Supplemental Material - ph0c00027_si_001.pdf
Files
Name | Size | Download all |
---|---|---|
md5:4e739c61fcf65f68cea007506cebf329
|
1.6 MB | Preview Download |
md5:8a6386a103d5d086d1b321aa198e74d0
|
285.2 kB | Preview Download |
Additional details
- PMCID
- PMC8188831
- Eprint ID
- 101576
- Resolver ID
- CaltechAUTHORS:20200226-132116150
- NIH
- CA186567
- NIH
- NS090579
- NIH
- NS099717
- Created
-
2020-02-26Created from EPrint's datestamp field
- Updated
-
2021-06-11Created from EPrint's last_modified field