1 / 34

Life Analytical Chemistry-Molecular Imaging (MI): Optical Imaging

Life Analytical Chemistry-Molecular Imaging (MI): Optical Imaging. Gaolin Liang (梁高林) , Ph. D. Professor, Ph. D. Advisor Deptartment of Chemistry University of Science and Technology of China. Microscopic fluorescence imaging. Fluorescence imaging. Macroscopic fluorescence imaging.

asher-rivas
Download Presentation

Life Analytical Chemistry-Molecular Imaging (MI): Optical Imaging

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Life Analytical Chemistry-Molecular Imaging (MI): Optical Imaging Gaolin Liang (梁高林), Ph. D. Professor, Ph. D. Advisor Deptartment of Chemistry University of Science and Technology of China

  2. Microscopic fluorescence imaging Fluorescence imaging Macroscopic fluorescence imaging Optical Imaging bioluminescence imaging optical coherence tomography Non-Fluorescence- based optical imaging photoacoustic microscopy tissue spectroscopy

  3. Fluorescence imaging: Microscopic fluorescence imaging History: In 1839, Rudolph Wagner visualized leukocytes rolling in blood vessels within membranous translucent tissues by using brightfield Transillumination. Nowadays: Several imaging approaches based on fluorescence microscopy that were established for visualizing cells in vitro have recently been adapted for in vivo imaging: multiphoton microscopy, laser-scanning confocal microscopy, fibre-optic approaches and spectrally encoded endoscopy.

  4. Fluorescence imaging: Macroscopic fluorescence imaging There are two main types of imaging approach: fluorescence reflectance and tomographic fluorescence. FMT-CT/FMT-CT fusion

  5. Microscopic fluorescence imaging Fluorescence imaging Macroscopic fluorescence imaging Optical Imaging bioluminescence imaging optical coherence tomography Non-Fluorescence- based optical imaging photoacoustic microscopy tissue spectroscopy

  6. Non-Fluorescence-based optical imaging: bioluminescence imaging firefly (Photinus pyralis) luciferase–luciferin Renilla reniformis luciferase–coelenterazine luciferase–luciferin pairs Gaussia princeps luciferase–coelenterazine

  7. Non-Fluorescence-based optical imaging: bioluminescence imaging

  8. Non-Fluorescence-based optical imaging: optical coherence tomography Optical coherence tomography is based on light scattering and can be used to image microscopic structures in vivo (at a resolution of 2–15 μm and to a depth of 1–3 mm)

  9. Non-Fluorescence-based optical imaging: photoacoustic microscopy Photoacoustic microscopy uses short laser pulses to irradiate tissue and temporarily raise its temperature (by millikelvins). Thermo-elastic expansion then causes the emission of photoacoustic waves that can be measured by wide-band ultrasonic transducers, offering improved depth resolution in the 3–20 mm range

  10. Non-Fluorescence-based optical imaging: photoacoustic microscopy

  11. Non-Fluorescence-based optical imaging: photoacoustic microscopy

  12. Non-Fluorescence-based optical imaging: photoacoustic microscopy

  13. Non-Fluorescence-based optical imaging: photoacoustic microscopy

  14. Non-Fluorescence-based optical imaging: photoacoustic microscopy

  15. Non-Fluorescence-based optical imaging: tissue spectroscopy tissue spectroscopy detects relative changes in the way in which light interacts with tissue and has been used extensively to improve early detection of gastrointestinal malignancies

  16. Thanks for your attention!

More Related