Microscopic phase reconstruction of cervical exfoliated cell under partially coherent illumination

J Biophotonics. 2021 Jan;14(1):e202000401. doi: 10.1002/jbio.202000401. Epub 2020 Nov 9.

Abstract

Basic coherent diffraction imaging methods strongly rely on having a highly coherent illumination in order to reconstruct the phase accurately. However, regardless of considering the turbulent transport medium, the instability of the system or the generation mechanism of the light source, partially coherent illumination is more common in real case. In this paper, we proposed an efficient microscopic phase imaging method to study normal and abnormal cervical exfoliated cells. By applying three phase modulations in a single point of the sample's transmitted field, the phase can be retrieved with correspoding three intensities under partially coherent illumination. Compared with intensity map, we can efficiently and clearly judge the proportion of high density shrinking abnormal cells from the phase distributions, which provides a confident analysis and evaluation basis for early medical diagnosis of cervical cancer. This study also has potential applications in noninvasive optical imaging of dynamic biological tissues.

Keywords: cervical exfoliated cell; coherent diffractive imaging; label-free; microscopy; partially coherent; phase retrieval.

Publication types

  • Research Support, Non-U.S. Gov't

MeSH terms

  • Lighting*
  • Optical Imaging*