Nicolai Brill, Mathias Wirtz, Dorit Merhof, Markus Tingart, Holger Jahr, Daniel Truhn, Robert Schmitt, Sven Nebelung
Journal of Biomedical Optics, Vol. 21, Issue 07, 076013, (July 2016) https://doi.org/10.1117/1.JBO.21.7.076013
TOPICS: Cartilage, Coherence imaging, Birefringence, Tissues, Optical coherence tomography, Natural surfaces, Coherence (optics), Optical imaging, Biomedical optics, Polarization
Polarization-sensitive optical coherence tomography (PS-OCT) is a light-based, high-resolution, real-time, noninvasive, and nondestructive imaging modality yielding quasimicroscopic cross-sectional images of cartilage. As yet, comprehensive parameterization and quantification of birefringence and tissue properties have not been performed on human cartilage. PS-OCT and algorithm-based image analysis were used to objectively grade human cartilage degeneration in terms of surface irregularity, tissue homogeneity, signal attenuation, as well as birefringence coefficient and band width, height, depth, and number. Degeneration-dependent changes were noted for the former three parameters exclusively, thereby questioning the diagnostic value of PS-OCT in the assessment of human cartilage degeneration.