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. 2015 Apr;8(4):317-23.
doi: 10.1002/jbio.201400104. Epub 2014 Oct 18.

Application of circularly polarized light for non-invasive diagnosis of cancerous tissues and turbid tissue-like scattering media

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Application of circularly polarized light for non-invasive diagnosis of cancerous tissues and turbid tissue-like scattering media

Britt Kunnen et al. J Biophotonics. 2015 Apr.

Abstract

Polarization-based optical techniques have become increasingly popular in the field of biomedical diagnosis. In the current report we exploit the directional awareness of circularly and/or elliptically polarized light backscattered from turbid tissue-like scattering media. We apply circularly and elliptically polarized laser light which illuminates the samples of interest, and a standard optical polarimeter is used to observe the polarization state of light backscattered a few millimeters away from the point of incidence. We demonstrate that the Stokes vector of backscattered light depicted on a Poincaré sphere can be used to assess a turbid tissue-like scattering medium. By tracking the Stokes vector of the detected light on the Poincaré sphere, we investigate the utility of this approach for characterization of cancerous and non-cancerous tissue samples in vitro. The obtained results are discussed in the framework of a phenomenological model and the results of a polarization tracking Monte Carlo model, developed in house. Schematic illustration of the experimental approach utilizing circularly and elliptically polarized light for probing turbid tissue-like scattering media.

Keywords: Poincarésphere; Stokes vector; angular momentum; cancer detection; circularly polarized light; multiple scattering; optical biopsy; tissue samples.

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