The impact of laser ablation on optical soft tissue differentiation for tissue specific laser surgery-an experimental ex vivo study

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The impact of laser ablation on optical soft tissue differentiation for tissue specific laser surgery-an experimental ex vivo study. / Stelzle, Florian; Terwey, Ingo; Knipfer, Christian; Adler, Werner; Tangermann-Gerk, Katja; Nkenke, Emeka; Schmidt, Michael.

in: J TRANSL MED, Jahrgang 10, 15.06.2012, S. 123.

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@article{579909f592da4cfeacc7cce32048b1d7,
title = "The impact of laser ablation on optical soft tissue differentiation for tissue specific laser surgery-an experimental ex vivo study",
abstract = "BACKGROUND: Optical diffuse reflectance can remotely differentiate various bio tissues. To implement this technique in an optical feedback system to guide laser surgery in a tissue-specific way, the alteration of optical tissue properties by laser ablation has to be taken into account. It was the aim of this study to evaluate the general feasibility of optical soft tissue differentiation by diffuse reflectance spectroscopy under the influence of laser ablation, comparing the tissue differentiation results before and after laser intervention.METHODS: A total of 70 ex vivo tissue samples (5 tissue types) were taken from 14 bisected pig heads. Diffuse reflectance spectra were recorded before and after Er:YAG-laser ablation. The spectra were analyzed and differentiated using principal component analysis (PCA), followed by linear discriminant analysis (LDA). To assess the potential of tissue differentiation, area under the curve (AUC), sensitivity and specificity was computed for each pair of tissue types before and after laser ablation, and compared to each other.RESULTS: Optical tissue differentiation showed good results before laser exposure (total classification error 13.51%). However, the tissue pair nerve and fat yielded lower AUC results of only 0.75. After laser ablation slightly reduced differentiation results were found with a total classification error of 16.83%. The tissue pair nerve and fat showed enhanced differentiation (AUC: 0.85). Laser ablation reduced the sensitivity in 50% and specificity in 80% of the cases of tissue pair comparison. The sensitivity of nerve-fat differentiation was enhanced by 35%.CONCLUSIONS: The observed results show the general feasibility of tissue differentiation by diffuse reflectance spectroscopy even under conditions of tissue alteration by laser ablation. The contrast enhancement for the differentiation between nerve and fat tissue after ablation is assumed to be due to laser removal of the surrounding lipid-rich nerve sheath. The results create the basis for a guidance system to control laser ablation in a tissue-specific way.",
keywords = "Animals, Cell Differentiation, Connective Tissue, Discriminant Analysis, Laser Therapy, Principal Component Analysis, Swine, Journal Article, Research Support, Non-U.S. Gov't",
author = "Florian Stelzle and Ingo Terwey and Christian Knipfer and Werner Adler and Katja Tangermann-Gerk and Emeka Nkenke and Michael Schmidt",
year = "2012",
month = jun,
day = "15",
doi = "10.1186/1479-5876-10-123",
language = "English",
volume = "10",
pages = "123",
journal = "J TRANSL MED",
issn = "1479-5876",
publisher = "BioMed Central Ltd.",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - The impact of laser ablation on optical soft tissue differentiation for tissue specific laser surgery-an experimental ex vivo study

AU - Stelzle, Florian

AU - Terwey, Ingo

AU - Knipfer, Christian

AU - Adler, Werner

AU - Tangermann-Gerk, Katja

AU - Nkenke, Emeka

AU - Schmidt, Michael

PY - 2012/6/15

Y1 - 2012/6/15

N2 - BACKGROUND: Optical diffuse reflectance can remotely differentiate various bio tissues. To implement this technique in an optical feedback system to guide laser surgery in a tissue-specific way, the alteration of optical tissue properties by laser ablation has to be taken into account. It was the aim of this study to evaluate the general feasibility of optical soft tissue differentiation by diffuse reflectance spectroscopy under the influence of laser ablation, comparing the tissue differentiation results before and after laser intervention.METHODS: A total of 70 ex vivo tissue samples (5 tissue types) were taken from 14 bisected pig heads. Diffuse reflectance spectra were recorded before and after Er:YAG-laser ablation. The spectra were analyzed and differentiated using principal component analysis (PCA), followed by linear discriminant analysis (LDA). To assess the potential of tissue differentiation, area under the curve (AUC), sensitivity and specificity was computed for each pair of tissue types before and after laser ablation, and compared to each other.RESULTS: Optical tissue differentiation showed good results before laser exposure (total classification error 13.51%). However, the tissue pair nerve and fat yielded lower AUC results of only 0.75. After laser ablation slightly reduced differentiation results were found with a total classification error of 16.83%. The tissue pair nerve and fat showed enhanced differentiation (AUC: 0.85). Laser ablation reduced the sensitivity in 50% and specificity in 80% of the cases of tissue pair comparison. The sensitivity of nerve-fat differentiation was enhanced by 35%.CONCLUSIONS: The observed results show the general feasibility of tissue differentiation by diffuse reflectance spectroscopy even under conditions of tissue alteration by laser ablation. The contrast enhancement for the differentiation between nerve and fat tissue after ablation is assumed to be due to laser removal of the surrounding lipid-rich nerve sheath. The results create the basis for a guidance system to control laser ablation in a tissue-specific way.

AB - BACKGROUND: Optical diffuse reflectance can remotely differentiate various bio tissues. To implement this technique in an optical feedback system to guide laser surgery in a tissue-specific way, the alteration of optical tissue properties by laser ablation has to be taken into account. It was the aim of this study to evaluate the general feasibility of optical soft tissue differentiation by diffuse reflectance spectroscopy under the influence of laser ablation, comparing the tissue differentiation results before and after laser intervention.METHODS: A total of 70 ex vivo tissue samples (5 tissue types) were taken from 14 bisected pig heads. Diffuse reflectance spectra were recorded before and after Er:YAG-laser ablation. The spectra were analyzed and differentiated using principal component analysis (PCA), followed by linear discriminant analysis (LDA). To assess the potential of tissue differentiation, area under the curve (AUC), sensitivity and specificity was computed for each pair of tissue types before and after laser ablation, and compared to each other.RESULTS: Optical tissue differentiation showed good results before laser exposure (total classification error 13.51%). However, the tissue pair nerve and fat yielded lower AUC results of only 0.75. After laser ablation slightly reduced differentiation results were found with a total classification error of 16.83%. The tissue pair nerve and fat showed enhanced differentiation (AUC: 0.85). Laser ablation reduced the sensitivity in 50% and specificity in 80% of the cases of tissue pair comparison. The sensitivity of nerve-fat differentiation was enhanced by 35%.CONCLUSIONS: The observed results show the general feasibility of tissue differentiation by diffuse reflectance spectroscopy even under conditions of tissue alteration by laser ablation. The contrast enhancement for the differentiation between nerve and fat tissue after ablation is assumed to be due to laser removal of the surrounding lipid-rich nerve sheath. The results create the basis for a guidance system to control laser ablation in a tissue-specific way.

KW - Animals

KW - Cell Differentiation

KW - Connective Tissue

KW - Discriminant Analysis

KW - Laser Therapy

KW - Principal Component Analysis

KW - Swine

KW - Journal Article

KW - Research Support, Non-U.S. Gov't

U2 - 10.1186/1479-5876-10-123

DO - 10.1186/1479-5876-10-123

M3 - SCORING: Journal article

C2 - 22704127

VL - 10

SP - 123

JO - J TRANSL MED

JF - J TRANSL MED

SN - 1479-5876

ER -