29 research outputs found

    Heartbeat Optical Coherence Tomography

    Get PDF
    __Abstract__ Coronary artery disease (CAD) is a manifestation of atherosclerosis, a systemic inflammatory disease of the arteries that causes the formation of plaques in the artery walls. Different plaques may give rise to different symptoms: a gradual narrowing (stenosis) of the vessel by growth of a fibrous or calcific plaque will cause chest pain (due to cardiac ischemia) upon exertion, a condition called stable CAD. Sudden onset of chest pain, or chest pain at rest, is a symptom of unstable CAD or acute coronary syndrome (ACS), which is associated with thrombus formation on plaques, mostly due to rupture of a lipid-core lesion. The most severe form of this disease may lead to a myocardial infarction or heart attack

    Simultaneous Morphological and Flow Imaging Enabled by Megahertz Intravascular Doppler Optical Coherence Tomography

    Get PDF
    We demonstrate three-dimensional intravascular flow imaging compatible with routine clinical image acquisition workflow by means of megahertz (MHz) intravascular Doppler Optical Coherence Tomography (OCT). The OCT system relies on a 1.1 mm diameter motorized imaging catheter and a 1.5 MHz Fourier Domain Mode Locked (FDML) laser. Using a post processing method to compensate the drift of the FDML laser output, we can resolve the Doppler phase shift between two adjoining OCT A-line datasets. By interpretation of the velocity field as measured around the zero phase shift, the flow direction at specific angles can be qualitatively estimated. Imaging experiments were carried out in phantoms, micro channels, and swine coronary artery in vitro at a speed of 600 frames/s. The MHz wavelength sweep rate of the OCT system allows us to directly investigate flow velocity of up to 37.5 cm/s while computationally expensive phase-unwrapping has to be applied to measure such high speed using conventional OCT system. The MHz sweep rate also enables a volumetric Doppler imaging even with a fast pullback at 40 mm/s. We present the first simultaneously recorded 3D morphological images and Doppler flow profiles. Flow pattern estimation and three-dimensional structural reconstruction of entire coronary artery are achieved using a single OCT pullback dataset

    Real-time volumetric lipid imaging in vivo by intravascular photoacoustics at 20 frames per second

    Get PDF
    Lipid deposition can be assessed with combined intravascular photoacoustic/ultrasound (IVPA/US) imaging. To date, the clinical translation of IVPA/US imaging has been stalled by a low imaging speed and catheter complexity. In this paper, we demonstrate imaging of lipid targets in swine coronary arteries in vivo, at a clinically useful frame rate of 20 s−1. We confirmed image contrast for atherosclerotic plaque in human samples ex vivo. The system is on a mobile platform and provides real-time data visualization during acquisition. We achieved an IVPA signal-to-noise ratio of 20 dB. These data show that clinical translation of IVPA is possible in principle

    In-vitro and in-vivo imaging of coronary artery stents with Heartbeat OCT

    Get PDF
    To quantify the impact of cardiac motion on stent length measurements with Optical Coherence Tomography (OCT) and to demonstrate in vivo OCT imaging of implanted stents, without motion artefacts. The study consists of: clinical data evaluation, simulations and in vivo tests. A comparison between OCT-measured and nominal stent lengths in 101 clinically acquired pullbacks was carried out, followed by a simulation of the effect of cardiac motion on stent length measurements, experimentally and computationally. Both a commercial system and a custom OCT, capable of completing a pullback between two consecutive ventricular contractions, were employed. A 13 mm long stent was implanted in the left anterior descending branch of two atherosclerotic swine and imaged with both OCT systems. The analysis of the clinical OCT images yielded an average difference of 1.1 ± 1.6 mm, with a maximum difference of 7.8 mm and the simulations replicated the statistics observed in clinical data. Imaging with the custom OCT, yielded an RMS error of 0.14 mm at 60 BPM with the start of the acquisition synchronized to the cardiac cycle. In vivo imaging with conventional OCT yielded a deviation of 1.2 mm, relative to the length measured on ex-vivo micro-CT, while the length measured in the pullback acquired by the custom OCT differed by 0.20 mm. We demonstrated motion artefact-free OCT-imaging of implanted stents, using ECG triggering and a rapid pullback

    Thermo-elastic optical coherence tomography

    Get PDF
    The absorption of nanosecond laser pulses induces rapid thermo-elastic deformation in tissue. A sub-micrometer scale displacement occurs within a few microseconds after the pulse arrival. In this Letter, we investigate the laser-induced thermo-elastic deformation using a 1.5 MHz phase-sensitive optical coherence tomography (OCT) system. A displacement image can be reconstructed, which enables a new modality of phase-sensitive OCT, called thermo-elastic OCT. An analysis of the results shows that the optical absorption is a dominating factor for the displacement. Thermo-elastic OCT is capable of visualizing inclusions that do not appear on the structural OCT image, providing additional tissue type information

    Ultrahigh-speed intravascular optical coherence tomography imaging at 3200 frames per second

    No full text
    We demonstrated intravascular OCT imaging with frame rate up to 3.2 kHz (192,000 rpm scanning). This was achieved by using a custom-built catheter in which the circumferential scanning was actuated by a 1.0 mm diameter synchronous motor. The OCT system was based on a Fourier Domain Mode Locked laser operating at an A-line rate of 1.6 MHz. The diameter of the catheter was 1.1 mm at the tip. Ex vivo images of human coronary artery (~78.4 mm length) were acquired at a pullback speed of 100 mm/s. True 3D volumetric imaging of the entire artery, with adequate sampling in all dimensions, was performed in &lt; 1 second acquisition time.</p
    corecore