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Significance: Tumor tissues exhibit contrast with healthy tissue in circular degree of polarization (DOP) images via higher magnitude circular DOP values and increased helicity-flipping. This phenomenon may enable polarimetric tumor detection and surgical/procedural guidance applications.
Aim: Depolarization metrics have been shown to exhibit differential responses to healthy and cancer tissue, whereby tumor tissues tend to induce less depolarization; however, the understanding of this depolarization-based contrast remains limited. Therefore, we investigate depolarization signals from tumor tissue and non-tumor tissue.
Approach: Mice ( ) with human pancreatic ductal adenocarcinoma (PDAC) xenografts enable polarimetric comparison between tumor tissue and non-tumor tissues. Modified signed-value DOP equations aid in the interpretation of DOP images, which encode helicity-flipping and co-linearity as negative values, but still yield the same magnitudes as conventional DOP calculations.
Results: Linear DOP is greater in magnitude than circular DOP across both tissue types; however, circular DOP yields greater contrast between tumor and non-tumor tissues. Circular DOP values are higher in magnitude and more negative (i.e., more helicity-flipping) in tumors, whereas linear DOP values exhibit similar behavior; however, they are only slightly higher in magnitude and slightly more negative (i.e., more co-linearity) in tumors.
Conclusions: Circular DOP images yield useful contrast between human PDAC xenografts and surrounding healthy skin in live mice. Each tumor region exhibited higher magnitude circular DOP (and total DOP) values, as previously observed. We noted three indications of Rayleigh scattering in the tumor tissue: (1) linear DOP > circular DOP, (2) helicity-flipping > helicity-preservation, and (3) co-linear intensity > cross-linear intensity. Rayleigh scatterers have been found to be highly polarization preserving; thus, we posit that higher DOP in tumor tissues may arise from an increased presence of Rayleigh scatterers. Furthermore, circular DOP may yield greater contrast between tumor and non-tumor via its well-observed sensitivity to scatterer size. Further investigation is warranted to test these hypotheses.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1117/1.JBO.30.S3.S34105 | DOI Listing |
J Biomed Opt
December 2025
University of Toronto, Department of Medical Biophysics, Temerty Faculty of Medicine, Toronto, Ontario, Canada.
Significance: Tumor tissues exhibit contrast with healthy tissue in circular degree of polarization (DOP) images via higher magnitude circular DOP values and increased helicity-flipping. This phenomenon may enable polarimetric tumor detection and surgical/procedural guidance applications.
Aim: Depolarization metrics have been shown to exhibit differential responses to healthy and cancer tissue, whereby tumor tissues tend to induce less depolarization; however, the understanding of this depolarization-based contrast remains limited.
ACS Photonics
May 2025
Department of Photonics, College of Electrical and Computer Engineering, National Yang Ming Chiao Tung University, No. 1001, Daxue Road, Hsinchu City 300093, Taiwan.
The lack of intrinsic mirror symmetry in cavity mirrors poses a significant challenge for most organic chiral materials in generating circularly polarized (CP) lasers. However, nonreciprocal chiroptical materials, such as recently developed organic thin films exhibiting apparent circular dichroism (ACD), provide a promising approach to CP light generation. In this work, we integrate an ACD-based thin film into a free-space dye laser cavity, achieving direct CP laser emission with a degree of circular polarization (DOCP) up to 0.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFSensors (Basel)
January 2025
School of Optoelectronic Science and Engineering, South China Normal University, Guangzhou 510006, China.
Traditional underwater polarization imaging methods can only provide clear degree of polarization (DOP) and intensity images of the object but cannot provide images of the polarization state of the object. This paper proposes a method to extract clear object information from turbid water in all four Stokes parameter (I, Q, U, and V) channels by using the full Stokes camera, enabling clear polarization state image reconstruction. The method utilizes multiple images from different angles to construct a low-rank and sparse matrix.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFSci Rep
October 2024
Department of Medical Biophysics, University of Toronto, Toronto, ON, M5G 1L7, Canada.
Lasers Med Sci
May 2024
Department of Biophysics, Manipal School of Life Sciences, Manipal Academy of Higher Education, Manipal, 576104, India.
Interaction of polarized light with healthy and abnormal regions of tissue reveals structural information associated with its pathological condition. Even a slight variation in structural alignment can induce a change in polarization property, which can play a crucial role in the early detection of abnormal tissue morphology. We propose a transmission-based Stokes-Mueller microscope for quantitative analysis of the microstructural properties of the tissue specimen.
View Article and Find Full Text PDF