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Photoacoustic Tomography



Reconstruction-based photoacoustic imaging


Introduction

Photoacoustic (PA) computed tomography (PAT, or PACT) is based on the reconstruction of an internal PA source distribution from measurements acquired by scanning ultrasound detectors over a surface that encloses the source under study. The PA source is produced inside the object by the thermal expansion that results from a small temperature rise, which is caused by the absorption of externally applied radiation of pulsed electromagnetic (EM) waves. This technique has great potential for applications in the biomedical field because of the advantages of ultrasonic resolution in combination with EM absorption contrast. PAT is also called optoacoustic tomography (OAT) or thermoacoustic tomography (TAT), with the term “thermoacoustic” emphasizing the thermal expansion mechanism in the PA generation. OAT refers particularly to light-induced PAT, while TAT is used to refer to rf-induced PAT.


Technically, each temporal PA signal, measured at various detection positions, provides one-dimensional radial information about the PA source relative to the detector position; 2D surface scans offer other 2D lateral information about the PA source. Combining the temporal and spatial measurements affords sufficient information for a complete reconstruction of a 3D PA source. Because the PA signal received by each ultrasound detector is the integral of the ultrasound waves over the sensing aperture of the detector, the reconstruction algorithms depend on the detector apertures as well as the scanning geometries. Small-aperture detectors are often used to approximate point detectors, which receive PA signals originating from spherical shells, centered at each point detector, with radii determined by the acoustic times of flight. The three geometries commonly used are planar, cylindrical, and spherical surfaces. Both Fourier- and time-domain reconstruction formulas with point-detector measurements for these geometries have been well established. Besides, algorithms based on other detection methods, such as large-aperture (plane), line, or circle detectors have also been derived.


References

[1]Photoacoustic imaging in biomedicine. Review Article. Review of Scientific Instruments, 77, Article Number 041101 (2006).

[2]Photoacoustic tomography using a Mach-Zehnder interferometer as an acoustic line detector. Applied Optics, 46, pp. 3352-3358 (2007).

 
This article is licensed under the GNU Free Documentation License. It uses material from the Wikipedia article "Photoacoustic_Tomography". A list of authors is available in Wikipedia.
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