Differential oblique angle spectroscopy of the oral epithelium |
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Authors: | Hattery David Hattery Brenda Chernomordik Victor Smith Paul Loew Murray Mulshine James Gandjbakhche Amir |
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Affiliation: | National Institutes of Health, National Institute of Child Health and Human Development, Laboratory of Integrative and Medical Biophysics, Building 9, Room B1E11, Bethesda, Maryland 20892-0924, USA. hattery@ieee.org |
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Abstract: | Increasing evidence suggests that inflammation may contribute to the process of carcinogenesis. This is the basis of several clinical trials evaluating potential chemopreventive drugs. These trials require quantitative assessments of inflammation, which, for the oral epithelium, are traditionally provided by histopathological evaluation. To reduce patient discomfort and morbidity of tissue biopsy procedures, we develop a noninvasive alternative using diffuse reflectance spectroscopy to measure epithelial thickness as an index of tissue inflammation. Although any optical system has the potential for probing near-surface structures, traditional methods of accounting for scattering of photons are generally invalid for typical epithelial thicknesses. We develop a single-scattering theory that is valid for typical epithelial thicknesses. The theory accurately predicts a distinctive feature that can be used to quantify epithelial thickness given intensity measurements with sources at two different angles relative to the tissue surface. This differential measure approach has acute sensitivity to small, layer-related changes in scattering coefficients. To assess the capability of our method to quantify epithelial thickness, detailed Monte Carlo simulations and measurements on phantom models of a two-layered structure are performed. The results show that the intensity ratio maximum feature can be used to quantify epithelial thickness with an error less than 30% despite fourfold changes in scattering coefficients and 10-fold changes in absorption coefficients. An initial study using a simple two-source, four-detector probe on patients shows that the technique has promise. We believe that this new method will perform well on patients with diverse tissue optical characteristics and therefore be of practical clinical value for quantifying epithelial thickness in vivo. |
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