Diffuse optical characterization of collagen absorption from 500 to 1700 nm

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Abstract

Reduction in scattering, high absorption, and spectral features of tissue constituents above 1000 nm could help in gaining higher spatial resolution, penetration depth, and specificity for in vivo studies, opening possibilities of near-infrared diffuse optics in tissue diagnosis. We present the characterization of collagen absorption over a broadband range (500 to 1700 nm) and compare it with spectra presented in the literature. Measurements were performed using a time-domain diffuse optical technique. The spectrum was extracted by carefully accounting for various spectral distortion effects, due to sample and system properties. The contribution of several tissue constituents (water, lipid, collagen, oxy, and deoxy-hemoglobin) to the absorption properties of a collagen-rich in vivo bone location, such as radius distal in the 500-to 1700-nm wavelength region, is also discussed, suggesting bone diagnostics as a potential area of interest.

Original languageEnglish
Article number015006
JournalJournal of Biomedical Optics
Volume22
Issue number1
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 1 Jan 2017
Externally publishedYes

Keywords

  • biomedical optics
  • collagen absorption
  • diffuse optics
  • scattering
  • time-resolved spectroscopy

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