Redistribution and cardiomegaly are the best chest radiographic findings for diagnosing increased preload and reduced ejection fraction, respectively. Unfortunately, neither finding alone can adequately exclude or confirm left ventricular dysfunction in usual clinical settings. Redistribution is not always reliably interpreted.
We have designed, fabricated and tested a new laser optoacoustic imaging system (LOIS-64/16) for quantitative optoacoustic tomography of breast cancer. The system was designed to create a single slice of an optoacoustic image of the breast with 64 ultrawide band acoustic transducers. Other 16 transducers on the back of the acoustic probe were used to reconstruct the light distribution inside the breast. The system resolution was at least 0.5 mm for high-aspect-ratio objects. Maximum system sensitivity was 4.8 mV/Pa and the RMS noise of 3.1 mV, which allowed imaging of small (less than 1 cm) tumors at depths over 3 cm. The directivity of the optoacoustic transducers used in LOIS-64/16 assured that the signal detection was better than 70% of the maximum for about 75% of the imaging slice and reduced quickly for signals coming from out of the imaging slice. Implemented signal processing allowed significant reduction of the low-frequency acoustic noise and localizing the small OA signals. The system was able to differentiate phantoms mimicking tumors and malformations visualized in clinics based on the contrast and morphology of their images obtained at 1064 nm and 757 nm.
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