Comparison of spatially and temporally resolved diffuse-reflectance measurement systems for determination of biomedical optical properties

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Abstract

Time-resolved and spatially resolved measurements of the diffuse reflectance from biological tissue are two well-established techniques for extracting the reduced scattering and absorption coefficients. We have performed a comparison study of the performance of a spatially resolved and a time-resolved instrument at wavelengths 660 and 785 nm and also of an integrating-sphere setup at 550–800 nm. The first system records the diffuse reflectance from a diode laser by means of a fiber bundle probe in contact with the sample. The time-resolved system utilizes picosecond laser pulses and a single-photoncounting detection scheme. We extracted the optical properties by calibration using known standards for the spatially resolved system, by fitting to the diffusion equation for the time-resolved system, and by using an inverse Monte Carlo model for the integrating sphere. The measurements were performed on a set of solid epoxy tissue phantoms. The results showed less than 10% difference in the evaluation of the reduced scattering coefficient among the systems for the phantoms in the range 9–20 cm–1, and absolute differences of less than 0.05 cm–1for the absorption coefficient in the interval 0.05-0.30 cm–1.

Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)4612-4620
Number of pages9
JournalApplied Optics
Volume42
Issue number22
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 1 Aug 2003
Externally publishedYes

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