The small size, high sensitivity, and immunity to electromagnetic interference of fibre-optic ultrasound sensors make them highly attractive for applications in biomedical imaging and metrology. Typically, such sensors rely on optically resonant structures, such as Fabry-Perot cavities, that require elaborate fabrication techniques. Here, an alternative fibre-optic ultrasound sensor is presented that comprises a simple deformable and reflective structure that was deposited using simple dip-coating.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFAll-optical ultrasound (OpUS) is an imaging paradigm that uses light to both generate and receive ultrasound, and has progressed from benchtop to studies in recent years, demonstrating promise for minimally invasive surgical applications. In this work, we present a rapid pullback imaging catheter for side-viewing B-mode ultrasound imaging within the upper gastrointestinal tract. The device comprised an ultrasound transmitter configured to generate ultrasound laterally from the catheter and a plano-concave microresonator for ultrasound reception.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFAll-optical ultrasound (OpUS) has emerged as an imaging paradigm well-suited to minimally invasive imaging due to its ability to provide high resolution imaging from miniaturised fibre optic devices. Here, we report a fibre optic device capable of concurrent laser interstitial thermal therapy (LITT) and real-time all-optical ultrasound imaging for lesion monitoring. The device comprised three optical fibres: one each for ultrasound transmission, reception and thermal therapy light delivery.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFAll-optical ultrasound (OpUS) is an emerging high resolution imaging paradigm utilising optical fibres. This allows both therapeutic and imaging modalities to be integrated into devices with dimensions small enough for minimally invasive surgical applications. Here we report a dual-modality fibre optic probe that synchronously performs laser ablation and real-time all-optical ultrasound imaging for ablation monitoring.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFAll-optical ultrasound (OpUS), where ultrasound is both generated and received using light, has emerged as a modality well-suited to highly miniaturised applications. In this work we present a proof-of-concept OpUS transducer built onto a single optical fibre with a highly miniaturised lateral dimension (<0.8 mm).
View Article and Find Full Text PDFAbstract: All-optical ultrasound (OpUS) imaging has emerged as an imaging paradigm well-suited for minimally invasive surgical procedures. With this modality, ultrasound is generated when pulsed or modulated light is absorbed within a coating material. By engineering wavelength-selective coatings, complementary imaging and therapeutic modalities can be integrated with OpUS.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFDual-modality imaging employing complementary modalities, such as all-optical ultrasound and photoacoustic imaging, is emerging as a well-suited technique for guiding minimally invasive surgical procedures. Quantum dots are a promising material for use in these dual-modality imaging devices as they can provide wavelength-selective optical absorption. The first quantum dot nanocomposite engineered for co-registered laser-generated ultrasound and photoacoustic imaging is presented.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFAll-optical ultrasound transducers are well-suited for use in imaging during minimally invasive surgical procedures. This requires highly miniaturised and flexible devices. Here we present optical ultrasound transmitters for imaging applications based on modified optical fibre distal tips which allow for larger transmitter element sizes, whilst maintaining small diameter proximal optical fibre.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFConventional intravascular ultrasound (IVUS) devices use piezoelectric transducers to electrically generate and receive US. With this paradigm, there are numerous challenges that restrict improvements in image quality. First, with miniaturization of the transducers to reduce device size, it can be challenging to achieve the sensitivities and bandwidths required for large tissue penetration depths and high spatial resolution.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFMiniaturised high-resolution imaging devices are valuable for guiding minimally invasive procedures such as vascular stent placements. Here, we present all-optical rotational B-mode pulse-echo ultrasound imaging. With this device, ultrasound transmission and reception are performed with light.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBy intervening during the early stage of gestation, fetal surgeons aim to correct or minimize the effects of congenital disorders. As compared to postnatal treatment of these disorders, such early interventions can often actually save the life of the fetus and also improve the quality of life of the newborn. However, fetal surgery is considered one of the most challenging disciplines within Minimally Invasive Surgery (MIS), owing to factors such as the fragility of the anatomic features, poor visibility, limited manoeuvrability, and extreme requirements in terms of instrument handling with precise positioning.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFMicroscopic and mesoscale optical imaging techniques allow for three-dimensional (3-D) imaging of biological tissue across millimeter-scale regions, and imaging phantom models are invaluable for system characterization and clinical training. Phantom models that replicate complex 3-D geometries with both structural and molecular contrast, with resolution and lateral dimensions equivalent to those of imaging techniques (<20 μm), have proven elusive. We present a method for fabricating phantom models using a combination of two-photon polymerization (2PP) to print scaffolds, and microinjection of tailored tissue-mimicking materials to simulate healthy and diseased tissue.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFHigh-frequency ultrasound imaging can provide exquisite visualizations of tissue to guide minimally invasive procedures. Here, we demonstrate that an all-optical ultrasound transducer, through which light guided by optical fibers is used to generate and receive ultrasound, is suitable for real-time invasive medical imaging . Broad-bandwidth ultrasound generation was achieved through the photoacoustic excitation of a multiwalled carbon nanotube-polydimethylsiloxane composite coating on the distal end of a 300-μm multi-mode optical fiber by a pulsed laser.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFAll-optical ultrasound transducers are promising for imaging applications in minimally invasive surgery. In these devices, ultrasound is transmitted and received through laser modulation, and they can be readily miniaturized using optical fibers for light delivery. Here, we report optical ultrasound transmitters fabricated by electrospinning an absorbing polymer composite directly onto the end-face of optical fibers.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFIEEE Trans Ultrason Ferroelectr Freq Control
January 2016
In biomedical all-optical pulse-echo ultrasound systems, ultrasound is generated with the photoacoustic effect by illuminating an optically absorbing structure with a temporally modulated light source. Nanosecond range laser pulses are typically used, which can yield bandwidths exceeding 100 MHz. However, acoustical attenuation within tissue or nonuniformities in the detector or source power spectra result in energy loss at the affected frequencies and in a reduced overall system efficiency.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFAn all-optical ultrasound probe for vascular tissue imaging was developed. Ultrasound was generated by pulsed laser illumination of a functionalized carbon nanotube composite coating on the end face of an optical fiber. Ultrasound was detected with a Fabry-Pérot (FP) cavity on the end face of an adjacent optical fiber.
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