Comparing in vivo pump-probe and multiphoton fluorescence microscopy of melanoma and pigmented lesions.

J Biomed Opt

Duke University, Department of Chemistry, Box 90354, Durham, North Carolina 27708-0354, United StatesbDuke University Medical Center, Department of Radiology, Box 3808, Durham, North Carolina 27710, United StatesdDuke University, Department of Biomedical.

Published: May 2015

We demonstrate a multimodal approach that combines a pump-probe with confocal reflectance and multiphoton autofluorescence microscopy. Pump-probe microscopy has been proven to be of great value in analyzing thin tissue sections of pigmented lesions, as it produces molecular contrast which is inaccessible by other means. However, the higher optical intensity required to overcome scattering in thick tissue leads to higher-order nonlinearities in the optical response of melanin (e.g., two-photon pump and one-photon probe) that present additional challenges for interpreting the data. We show that analysis of pigment composition in vivo must carefully account for signal terms that are nonlinear with respect to the pump and probe intensities. We find that pump-probe imaging gives useful contrast for pigmented structures over a large range of spatial scales (100 μm to 1 cm), making it a potentially useful tool for tracking the progression of pigmented lesions without the need to introduce exogenous contrast agents.

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http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4409034PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1117/1.JBO.20.5.051012DOI Listing

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