Reduced motion artifacts and speed improvements in enhanced line-scanning fiber bundle endomicroscopy
Andrew D. Thrapp, Michael R. Hughes

TL;DR
This paper presents a novel high-speed subtraction method for fiber bundle endomicroscopy that enhances optical sectioning and reduces motion artifacts, enabling mosaicing at up to 240 Hz.
Contribution
A new single-frame subtraction technique utilizing CMOS rolling shutter for improved optical sectioning and high-speed mosaicing in fiber endomicroscopy.
Findings
Enhanced optical sectioning compared to conventional methods
Motion artifacts are not introduced at high speeds
Achieved mosaicing at frame rates up to 240 Hz
Abstract
Significance: Confocal laser scanning enables optical sectioning in fiber bundle endomicroscopy but limits the frame rate. To be able to better explore tissue morphology it is useful to stitch sequentially acquired frames into a mosaic. However, low frame rates limit the maximum probe translation speed. Line-scanning confocal endomicroscopy provides higher frame rates, but residual out-of-focus light degrades images. Subtraction based approaches can suppress this residue at the expense of introducing motion artifacts. Aim: To generate high frame rate endomicroscopy images with improved optical sectioning, we develop a high-speed subtraction method that only requires the acquisition of a single camera frame. Approach: The rolling shutter of a CMOS camera acts as both the aligned and offset detector slits required for subtraction-based sectioning enhancement. Two images of the bundle…
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