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      Current and future trends in photoacoustic breast imaging

      review-article
      * ,
      Photoacoustics
      Elsevier
      Photoacoustic, Optoacoustic, Breast cancer, Breast imaging, Mammography

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          Abstract

          Non-invasive detection of breast cancer has been regarded as the holy grail of applications for photoacoustic (optoacoustic) imaging right from the early days of re-discovery of the method. Two-and-a-half decades later we report on the state-of-the-art in photoacoustic breast imaging technology and clinical studies. Even within the single application of breast imaging, we find imagers with various measurement geometries, ultrasound detection characteristics, illumination schemes, and image reconstruction strategies. We first analyze the implications on performance of a few of these design choices in a generic imaging system, before going into detailed descriptions of the imagers. Per imaging system we present highlights of patient studies, which barring a couple are mostly in the nature of technology demonstrations and proof-of-principle studies. We close this work with a discussion on several aspects that may turn out to be crucial for the future clinical translation of the method.

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          Most cited references92

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          Contrast agents for molecular photoacoustic imaging.

          Photoacoustic imaging (PAI) is an emerging tool that bridges the traditional depth limits of ballistic optical imaging and the resolution limits of diffuse optical imaging. Using the acoustic waves generated in response to the absorption of pulsed laser light, it provides noninvasive images of absorbed optical energy density at depths of several centimeters with a resolution of ∼100 μm. This versatile and scalable imaging modality has now shown potential for molecular imaging, which enables visualization of biological processes with systemically introduced contrast agents. Understanding the relative merits of the vast range of contrast agents available, from small-molecule dyes to gold and carbon nanostructures to liposome encapsulations, is a considerable challenge. Here we critically review the physical, chemical and biochemical characteristics of the existing photoacoustic contrast agents, highlighting key applications and present challenges for molecular PAI.
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            Universal back-projection algorithm for photoacoustic computed tomography

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              Single-impulse Panoramic Photoacoustic Computed Tomography of Small-animal Whole-body Dynamics at High Spatiotemporal Resolution

              Imaging of small animals has played an indispensable role in preclinical research by providing high dimensional physiological, pathological, and phenotypic insights with clinical relevance. Yet pure optical imaging suffers from either shallow penetration (up to ~1–2 mm) or a poor depth-to-resolution ratio (~1/3), and non-optical techniques for whole-body imaging of small animals lack either spatiotemporal resolution or functional contrast. Here, we demonstrate that standalone single-impulse photoacoustic computed tomography (SIP-PACT) mitigates these limitations by combining high spatiotemporal resolution (125-µm in-plane resolution, 50 µs / frame data acquisition and 50-Hz frame rate), deep penetration (48-mm cross-sectional width in vivo), anatomical, dynamical and functional contrasts, and full-view fidelity. By using SIP-PACT, we imaged in vivo whole-body dynamics of small animals in real time and obtained clear sub-organ anatomical and functional details. We tracked unlabeled circulating melanoma cells and imaged the vasculature and functional connectivity of whole rat brains. SIP-PACT holds great potential for both pre-clinical imaging and clinical translation.
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                Author and article information

                Contributors
                Journal
                Photoacoustics
                Photoacoustics
                Photoacoustics
                Elsevier
                2213-5979
                30 June 2019
                December 2019
                30 June 2019
                : 16
                : 100134
                Affiliations
                [0005]Biomedical Photonic Imaging (BMPI) & Multi-Modality Medical Imaging (M3I), Technical Medical Centre, University of Twente, PB217, 7500AE Enschede, The Netherlands
                Author notes
                [* ]Corresponding author. s.manohar@ 123456utwente.nl
                Article
                S2213-5979(18)30044-2 100134
                10.1016/j.pacs.2019.04.004
                6909206
                31871887
                10d7088a-ef4d-406d-99c1-e62a0eac5fe1
                © 2019 The Authors

                This is an open access article under the CC BY license (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/).

                History
                : 6 September 2018
                : 19 February 2019
                : 10 April 2019
                Categories
                VSI: CLINICAL PHOTOACOUSTICS

                photoacoustic,optoacoustic,breast cancer,breast imaging,mammography

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