Thursday, October 19, 2006

Spectrally Encoded Mini Endoscope

Filed under: GI , Medicine , Surgery

Investigators from the Wellman Center for Photomedicine at Massachusetts General Hospital have developed a three-dimensional miniature endoscope, and have already tested it in a mouse model. Here's how it works:

Standard miniature endoscopic devices - which give physicians access to hard-to-reach internal organs and structures - utilize bundles of optical fibers to supply light to and transmit images from the areas of interest. Larger endoscopes that use image sensors to produce high-quality, two-dimensional images can be a centimeter or more in diameter. Existing miniature endoscopes using smaller fiber bundles may be more flexible but have difficulty producing high-quality images.

The new device developed at MGH-Wellman uses a technology called spectrally encoded endoscopy (SEE). Multicolored light from a single optical fiber - introduced through a probe about the size of a human hair - is broken into its component colors and projected onto tissue, with each color illuminating a different part of the tissue surface. The light reflected back is recorded, and the intensity of the various colors decoded by a spectrometer, which analyzes the wavelengths of light. Another device called an interferometer, which calculates structural information based on the interaction between two waves of light, provides the data required to create three-dimensional images.

To demonstrate the device's application in a live animal, the researchers used the system to image metastatic ovarian tumors on the abdominal wall of a mouse. The SEE probe was passed into the abdominal cavity through a fine-gauge needle. The resulting three-dimensional image showed several raised areas of tumor nodules, the presence of which was confirmed by histologic analysis of the tissue.

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replies: 2 comments
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Wow! This is a topic near and dear to my heart. FOr more than 10 years IO have worked in the development of microendoscopes and use these in surgery all the time. This is small enough and different enough to be enabling of radically new procedures.

I just posted a review of the brief history of microendoscopes on docinthemachine
http://docinthemachine.com/2006/10/02/nextfest-2-hand-gesture-controlled-surgery-and-tom-cruise/

check back on DITM monday for major breaking news of a new type of endoscope that makes invisible diease visible....


Posted by: Steven F. Palter, MD
on October 20, 2006 04:21 PM GMT

sorry guys I posted the wrong link to my history of microendoscopy

here is the correct one

http://docinthemachine.com/2006/10/20/new-microendoscope-analysis-potential/


Posted by: Steven F. Palter, MD
on October 20, 2006 04:23 PM GMT