Lindenmaier AA, Conroy L, Farhat G, DaCosta RS, Flueraru C, Vitkin A; Opt Lett. 2013;38(8):1280-2
doi:10.1364/OL.38.001280
Abstract
We demonstrate a method for differentiating tissue disease states using the intrinsic texture properties of speckle in optical coherence tomography (OCT) images of normal and tumor tissues obtained in vivo. This approach fits a gamma distribution function to the nonlog-compressed OCT image intensities, thus allowing differentiation of normal and tumor tissues in an ME-180 human cervical cancer mouse xenograft model. Quantitative speckle intensity distribution analysis thus shows promise for identifying tissue pathologies, with potential for early cancer detection in vivo.