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1.
Ophthalmol Ther ; 13(6): 1427-1451, 2024 Jun.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38630354

RESUMEN

Chronic, non-communicable diseases present a major barrier to living a long and healthy life. In many cases, early diagnosis can facilitate prevention, monitoring, and treatment efforts, improving patient outcomes. There is therefore a critical need to make screening techniques as accessible, unintimidating, and cost-effective as possible. The association between ocular biomarkers and systemic health and disease (oculomics) presents an attractive opportunity for detection of systemic diseases, as ophthalmic techniques are often relatively low-cost, fast, and non-invasive. In this review, we highlight the key associations between structural biomarkers in the eye and the four globally leading causes of morbidity and mortality: cardiovascular disease, cancer, neurodegenerative disease, and metabolic disease. We observe that neurodegenerative disease is a particularly promising target for oculomics, with biomarkers detected in multiple ocular structures. Cardiovascular disease biomarkers are present in the choroid, retinal vasculature, and retinal nerve fiber layer, and metabolic disease biomarkers are present in the eyelid, tear fluid, lens, and retinal vasculature. In contrast, only the tear fluid emerged as a promising ocular target for the detection of cancer. The retina is a rich source of oculomics data, the analysis of which has been enhanced by artificial intelligence-based tools. Although not all biomarkers are disease-specific, limiting their current diagnostic utility, future oculomics research will likely benefit from combining data from various structures to improve specificity, as well as active design, development, and optimization of instruments that target specific disease signatures, thus facilitating differential diagnoses.


Long-term diseases can stop people living long and healthy lives. In many cases, early diagnosis can help to prevent, monitor, and treat disease, which can improve patients' health. In order to diagnose disease, we need tools that are easy for patients to access, painless, and low-cost. The eye may provide the solution. In this review, we discuss the link between changes in the eye and four types of long-term disease that, together, kill most of the population: (1) Cardiovascular disease (affecting the heart and/or blood). (2) Cancer (abnormal growth of cells). (3) Neurodegenerative disease (affecting the brain and/or nervous system). (4) Metabolic disease (problems storing, accessing, and using the body's fuel). We show that neurodegenerative disease leaves tell-tale signs in lots of different parts of the eye. Signs of cardiovascular and metabolic disease biomarkers are mostly found in the back of the eye, and signs of cancer can be found in the tear fluid. Although signs of disease can be seen in the eye, not all of them will tell us what the disease is. We believe that future research will help us to understand more about long-term disease and how to detect it if we combine information from different structures within the eye and develop new tools to target these specific structures.

2.
J Biomed Opt ; 28(12): 126003, 2023 12.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38098981

RESUMEN

Significance: Postoperative surgical wound infection is a serious problem around the globe, including in countries with advanced healthcare systems, and a method for early detection of infection is urgently required. Aim: We explore spatial frequency domain imaging (SFDI) for distinguishing changes in surgical wound healing based on the tissue scattering properties and surgical wound width measurements. Approach: A comprehensive numerical method is developed by applying a three-dimensional Monte Carlo simulation to a vertical heterogeneous wound model. The Monte Carlo simulation results are validated using resin phantom imaging experiments. Results: We report on the SFDI lateral resolution with varying reduced scattering value and wound width and discuss the partial volume effect at the sharp vertical boundaries present in a surgical incision. The detection sensitivity of this method is dependent on spatial frequency, wound reduced scattering coefficient, and wound width. Conclusions: We provide guidelines for future SFDI instrument design and explanation for the expected error in SFDI measurements.


Asunto(s)
Herida Quirúrgica , Humanos , Método de Montecarlo , Diagnóstico por Imagen , Simulación por Computador , Fantasmas de Imagen
3.
Sci Rep ; 11(1): 2433, 2021 01 28.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-33510285

RESUMEN

Early stage dental caries can be remineralized without the need for "drill-and-fill" treatments that are more invasive and less permanent. However, early stage caries lesions typically present as a white spot on a white background, resulting in many lesions only being identified after they have developed beyond the point of remineralization as cavities. We present a spatial frequency domain imaging technique to characterize the optical properties of dental tissue. This technique enables different dental tissue types (healthy enamel, healthy dentin and damaged or demineralized enamel) to be easily distinguished from one another and allows quantification of the reduced scattering coefficients of dental tissue. The use of near-infrared light at 850 nm allows high depth penetration into the tissue and suppression of absorption effects, ensuring only changes in the reduced scattering coefficient that result directly from demineralization of enamel are observed and simplifying the analysis method. This technique provides a tool to both guide the attention of dentists to areas of interest and potential demineralization, and to provide longitudinal quantified assessments to monitor caries lesion behaviour over time.


Asunto(s)
Caries Dental/diagnóstico por imagen , Caries Dental/diagnóstico , Diagnóstico por Imagen , Espectroscopía Infrarroja Corta , Humanos , Dispersión de Radiación , Diente/diagnóstico por imagen
4.
Opt Express ; 24(3): 2281-92, 2016 Feb 08.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-26906804

RESUMEN

We present a solid-state laser system that generates over 200 mW of continuous-wave, narrowband light, tunable from 316.3 nm - 317.7 nm and 318.0 nm - 319.3 nm. The laser is based on commercially available fiber amplifiers and optical frequency doubling technology, along with sum frequency generation in a periodically poled stoichiometric lithium tantalate crystal. The laser frequency is stabilized to an atomic-referenced high finesse optical transfer cavity. Using a GPS-referenced optical frequency comb we measure a long term frequency instability of < 35 kHz for timescales between 10(-3) s and 10(3) s. As an application we perform spectroscopy of Sr Rydberg states from n = 37 - 81, demonstrating mode-hop-free scans of 24 GHz. In a cold atomic sample we measure Doppler-limited linewidths of 350 kHz.

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