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Journal article

Methodology for examining polarized light interactions with tissues and tissuelike media in the exact backscattering direction

Abstract

The properties of polarized light emerging from turbid media in the exact backscattering direction are studied by modulating the incident light polarization state and isolating the synchronous signal with lock-in amplifier detection. The results are reported for polystyrene microsphere suspensions in distilled water, with and without glucose, and for both ex vivo and in vivo biological tissues. A new theoretical formulation based on Mueller calculus is developed to describe the observed behavior of the backscattered light in terms of two sample parameters: optical rotation and depolarization. This technique proved successful in modeling both phantom and tissue samples. Results showed the presence of a significant surviving polarization fraction in the backscattering direction even in extremely dense optical phantom media, an important finding that has not been observed at other detection angles. Substantial polarized light preservation in biological tissue samples is also demonstrated for this detection geometry. This illustrates the potential of using polarized light to investigate turbid biological materials in vivo in retroreflection geometry.

Authors

Studinski RCN; Vitkin IA

Journal

Journal of Biomedical Optics, Vol. 5, No. 3, pp. 330–337

Publisher

SPIE, the international society for optics and photonics

Publication Date

July 1, 2000

DOI

10.1117/1.430004

ISSN

1083-3668

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