Dual modality ultrasound - photoacoustic clinical imaging system and its applications

Photoacoustic (PA) imaging is a rapidly growing hybrid biomedical imaging modality. Translating it to the clinic still remains a challenge which needs to be addressed. Using a clinical ultrasound imaging system if one can do dual modal ultrasound as well as photoacoustic imaging, it will be a big st...

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Main Author: Sivasubramanian, Kathyayini
Other Authors: Manojit Pramanik
Format: Theses and Dissertations
Language:English
Published: 2018
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Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/10356/74153
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Institution: Nanyang Technological University
Language: English
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spelling sg-ntu-dr.10356-741532023-03-03T16:06:39Z Dual modality ultrasound - photoacoustic clinical imaging system and its applications Sivasubramanian, Kathyayini Manojit Pramanik School of Chemical and Biomedical Engineering DRNTU::Engineering::Bioengineering Photoacoustic (PA) imaging is a rapidly growing hybrid biomedical imaging modality. Translating it to the clinic still remains a challenge which needs to be addressed. Using a clinical ultrasound imaging system if one can do dual modal ultrasound as well as photoacoustic imaging, it will be a big step towards clinical translation. Such system will provide the flexibility of combining with a variety of lasers and transducers to image various different body parts. By combining it with a high repetition rate pulsed laser diode, high frame rate PA imaging can be achieved. The high frame rate imaging is highly useful for real-time photoacoustic imaging. Energy from pulsed laser diode is low, and not all applications require high frame rate imaging. Therefore, a frequency doubled Nd:YAG laser pumping an optical parametric oscillator was also combined with the clinical ultrasound system for handheld dual modal ultrasound and photoacoustic imaging. A bifurcated optical fiber used for light illumination was integrated with the ultrasound probe. The imaging angle, the distance between fiber and tissue etc. was optimized using Monte Carlo simulations to finalize the handheld imaging probe holder design. The handheld probe was used for two different pre-clinical applications: sentinel lymph node imaging, and urinary bladder imaging. Firstly, sentinel lymph nodes in rats was imaged with methylene blue (675 nm) and indocyanine green (795 nm) as contrast agent. Non-invasive, real time needle tracking was also performed. Imaging depth similar to human imaging scenario was demonstrated. Furthermore, combined ultrasound and PA imaging of rat urinary bladder was demonstrated with the handheld probe. Structural and functional bladder imaging was shown. Also, the feasibility of PA imaging for a common bladder disorder, vesicoureteral reflux was studied using urinary tract mimicking phantoms. Additionally, non-invasive clearance study of gold nanorods from circulation was done by monitoring the accumulation of the gold nanorods in the bladder. Contrast agents are very important for improving photoacoustic signal strength and having multiple FDA approved contrast agent will make clinical translation more feasible. Two different contrast agents were explored in this work. With the development of combined dual modal imaging, dual modal contrast agents are needed. A dual modal organic dyes containing nitrogen microbubbles (<7 μm) generated from a flow focusing junction based microfluidic device. Here, the organic dyes (methylene blue and black ink) will provide the photoacoustic contrast and the nitrogen microbubbles will offer the ultrasound contrast. The efficiency of the contrast agent was initially tested in tube phantoms and later in in vivo studies. Another contrast agent explored is a potential theranostics agent, near-infrared light-sensitive liposomes coated with gold nanostars (AuNSs) for both PA imaging and drug release. We explored the use of AuNSs-coated liposomes as contrast agents for PA imaging with tissue phantom experiments. Doctor of Philosophy (SCBE) 2018-05-01T05:09:17Z 2018-05-01T05:09:17Z 2018 Thesis Sivasubramanian, K. (2018). Dual modality ultrasound - photoacoustic clinical imaging system and its applications. Doctoral thesis, Nanyang Technological University, Singapore. http://hdl.handle.net/10356/74153 10.32657/10356/74153 en 148 p. application/pdf
institution Nanyang Technological University
building NTU Library
continent Asia
country Singapore
Singapore
content_provider NTU Library
collection DR-NTU
language English
topic DRNTU::Engineering::Bioengineering
spellingShingle DRNTU::Engineering::Bioengineering
Sivasubramanian, Kathyayini
Dual modality ultrasound - photoacoustic clinical imaging system and its applications
description Photoacoustic (PA) imaging is a rapidly growing hybrid biomedical imaging modality. Translating it to the clinic still remains a challenge which needs to be addressed. Using a clinical ultrasound imaging system if one can do dual modal ultrasound as well as photoacoustic imaging, it will be a big step towards clinical translation. Such system will provide the flexibility of combining with a variety of lasers and transducers to image various different body parts. By combining it with a high repetition rate pulsed laser diode, high frame rate PA imaging can be achieved. The high frame rate imaging is highly useful for real-time photoacoustic imaging. Energy from pulsed laser diode is low, and not all applications require high frame rate imaging. Therefore, a frequency doubled Nd:YAG laser pumping an optical parametric oscillator was also combined with the clinical ultrasound system for handheld dual modal ultrasound and photoacoustic imaging. A bifurcated optical fiber used for light illumination was integrated with the ultrasound probe. The imaging angle, the distance between fiber and tissue etc. was optimized using Monte Carlo simulations to finalize the handheld imaging probe holder design. The handheld probe was used for two different pre-clinical applications: sentinel lymph node imaging, and urinary bladder imaging. Firstly, sentinel lymph nodes in rats was imaged with methylene blue (675 nm) and indocyanine green (795 nm) as contrast agent. Non-invasive, real time needle tracking was also performed. Imaging depth similar to human imaging scenario was demonstrated. Furthermore, combined ultrasound and PA imaging of rat urinary bladder was demonstrated with the handheld probe. Structural and functional bladder imaging was shown. Also, the feasibility of PA imaging for a common bladder disorder, vesicoureteral reflux was studied using urinary tract mimicking phantoms. Additionally, non-invasive clearance study of gold nanorods from circulation was done by monitoring the accumulation of the gold nanorods in the bladder. Contrast agents are very important for improving photoacoustic signal strength and having multiple FDA approved contrast agent will make clinical translation more feasible. Two different contrast agents were explored in this work. With the development of combined dual modal imaging, dual modal contrast agents are needed. A dual modal organic dyes containing nitrogen microbubbles (<7 μm) generated from a flow focusing junction based microfluidic device. Here, the organic dyes (methylene blue and black ink) will provide the photoacoustic contrast and the nitrogen microbubbles will offer the ultrasound contrast. The efficiency of the contrast agent was initially tested in tube phantoms and later in in vivo studies. Another contrast agent explored is a potential theranostics agent, near-infrared light-sensitive liposomes coated with gold nanostars (AuNSs) for both PA imaging and drug release. We explored the use of AuNSs-coated liposomes as contrast agents for PA imaging with tissue phantom experiments.
author2 Manojit Pramanik
author_facet Manojit Pramanik
Sivasubramanian, Kathyayini
format Theses and Dissertations
author Sivasubramanian, Kathyayini
author_sort Sivasubramanian, Kathyayini
title Dual modality ultrasound - photoacoustic clinical imaging system and its applications
title_short Dual modality ultrasound - photoacoustic clinical imaging system and its applications
title_full Dual modality ultrasound - photoacoustic clinical imaging system and its applications
title_fullStr Dual modality ultrasound - photoacoustic clinical imaging system and its applications
title_full_unstemmed Dual modality ultrasound - photoacoustic clinical imaging system and its applications
title_sort dual modality ultrasound - photoacoustic clinical imaging system and its applications
publishDate 2018
url http://hdl.handle.net/10356/74153
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