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. 1989 Dec;36(12):1222-32.
doi: 10.1109/10.42117.

A one-layer model of laser-induced fluorescence for diagnosis of disease in human tissue: applications to atherosclerosis

A one-layer model of laser-induced fluorescence for diagnosis of disease in human tissue: applications to atherosclerosis

R Richards-Kortum et al. IEEE Trans Biomed Eng. 1989 Dec.

Abstract

This paper describes a general model of tissue fluorescence which can be used both to: 1) determine chemical and physical properties of the tissue, and 2) design an optimal algorithm for clinical diagnosis of tissue composition. This model is based on a picture of tissue as a single, optically thick layer, in which fluorophores and absorbing species are homogeneously distributed. As a specific example, the model is applied to the laser induced fluorescence (LIF) of normal and atherosclerotic human aorta using 476 nm excitation. Methods for determining the relevant attenuation and fluorescence lineshapes are detailed, and these lineshapes are used to apply the model to data from 148 samples. The model parameters are related to the concentrations of the major arterial chromophores: structural proteins, hemoglobin and ceroid. In addition, the model parameters are used to derive diagnostic algorithms for the presence of atherosclerosis. Utilizing a binary classification scheme, the presence or absence of pathology was determined correctly in 88 percent of cases.

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