Eigenspectra optoacoustic tomography achieves quantitative blood oxygenation imaging deep in tissues
Stratis Tzoumas, Antonio Nunes, Ivan Olefir, Stefan Stangl, Panagiotis, Symvoulidis, Sarah Glasl, Christine Bayer, Gabriele Multhoff, Vasilis, Ntziachristos

TL;DR
This paper introduces eigenspectra Multispectral Optoacoustic Tomography (eMSOT), a novel method that accurately quantifies blood oxygenation deep in tissues by accounting for wavelength-dependent light attenuation without needing detailed tissue optical properties.
Contribution
The study discovers a new principle describing light fluence as an affine function of reference spectra, enabling eMSOT to improve sO2 imaging accuracy without explicit optical property knowledge.
Findings
eMSOT achieves over 10-fold accuracy improvement in sO2 quantification.
eMSOT can spatially resolve tissue oxygenation in muscle and tumors.
eMSOT images correlate well with histological hypoxia and perfusion maps.
Abstract
Light propagating in tissue attains a spectrum that varies with location due to wavelength-dependent fluence attenuation by tissue optical properties, an effect that causes spectral corruption. Predictions of the spectral variations of light fluence in tissue are challenging since the spatial distribution of optical properties in tissue cannot be resolved in high resolution or with high accuracy by current methods. Spectral corruption has fundamentally limited the quantification accuracy of optical and optoacoustic methods and impeded the long sought-after goal of imaging blood oxygen saturation (sO2) deep in tissues; a critical but still unattainable target for the assessment of oxygenation in physiological processes and disease. We discover a new principle underlying light fluence in tissues, which describes the wavelength dependence of light fluence as an affine function of a few…
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