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Dive into the research topics where Dan P. Popescu is active.

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Featured researches published by Dan P. Popescu.


Journal of Biomedical Optics | 2008

Assessment of early demineralization in teeth using the signal attenuation in optical coherence tomography images

Dan P. Popescu; Michael G. Sowa; Mark Hewko; Lin-P’ing Choo-Smith

Optical coherence tomography imaging is used to improve the detection of incipient carious lesions in dental enamel. Measurements of signal attenuation in images acquired with an 850-nm light source were performed on 21 extracted molars from eight human volunteers. Stronger attenuation was observed for the optical coherence tomography (OCT) signal in healthy enamel than in carious lesions. The measured attenuation coefficients from the two groups form distinct statistical populations. The coefficients obtained from sound enamel fall within the range of 0.70 to 2.14 mm(-1) with a mean value of 1.35 mm(-1), while those in carious regions range from 0.47 to 1.88 mm(-1), with a mean value of 0.77 mm(-1). Three values are selected as the lower threshold for signal attenuation in sound enamel: 0.99, 0.94, and 0.88 mm(-1). These thresholds were selected to provide detection of sound enamel with fixed specificities of 90%, 95%, and 97.5%, respectively. The corresponding sensitivities for the detection of carious lesions are 92.8%, 90.4%, and 87%, respectively, for the sample population used in this study. These findings suggest that attenuation of OCT signal at 850 nm could be an indicator of tooth demineralization and could be used as a marker for early caries detection.


Biomedical Optics Express | 2010

Signal attenuation and box-counting fractal analysis of optical coherence tomography images of arterial tissue

Dan P. Popescu; Costel Flueraru; Youxin Mao; Shoude Chang; Michael G. Sowa

The sensitivity of optical coherence tomography images to sample morphology is tested by two methods. The first method estimates the attenuation of the OCT signal from various regions of the probed tissue. The second method uses a box-counting algorithm to calculate the fractal dimensions in the regions of interest identified in the images. Although both the attenuation coefficient as well as the fractal dimension correlate very well with the anatomical features of the probed samples; the attenuation method provides a better sensitivity. Two types of samples are used in this study: segments of arteries collected from atherosclerosis–prone Watanabe rabbits (WHHL-MI) and healthy segments of porcine coronary arteries.


Biophysical Reviews | 2011

Optical coherence tomography: fundamental principles, instrumental designs and biomedical applications

Dan P. Popescu; Lin-P’ing Choo-Smith; Costel Flueraru; Youxin Mao; Shoude Chang; John Disano; Sherif S. Sherif; Michael G. Sowa

The advances made in the last two decades in interference technologies, optical instrumentation, catheter technology, optical detectors, speed of data acquisition and processing as well as light sources have facilitated the transformation of optical coherence tomography from an optical method used mainly in research laboratories into a valuable tool applied in various areas of medicine and health sciences. This review paper highlights the place occupied by optical coherence tomography in relation to other imaging methods that are used in medical and life science areas such as ophthalmology, cardiology, dentistry and gastrointestinal endoscopy. Together with the basic principles that lay behind the imaging method itself, this review provides a summary of the functional differences between time-domain, spectral-domain and full-field optical coherence tomography, a presentation of specific methods for processing the data acquired by these systems, an introduction to the noise sources that plague the detected signal and the progress made in optical coherence tomography catheter technology over the last decade.


Physics in Medicine and Biology | 2011

Evaluation of texture parameters for the quantitative description of multimodal nonlinear optical images from atherosclerotic rabbit arteries

Leila B. Mostaço-Guidolin; Alex C-T. Ko; Dan P. Popescu; Michael S. D. Smith; Elicia K. Kohlenberg; Masashi Shiomi; Arkady Major; Michael G. Sowa

The composition and structure of atherosclerotic lesions can be directly related to the risk they pose to the patient. Multimodal nonlinear optical (NLO) microscopy provides a powerful means to visualize the major extracellular components of the plaque that critically determine its structure. Textural features extracted from NLO images were investigated for their utility in providing quantitative descriptors of structural and compositional changes associated with plaque development. Ten texture parameters derived from the image histogram and gray level co-occurrence matrix were examined that highlight specific structural and compositional motifs that distinguish early and late stage plaques. Tonal-texture parameters could be linked to key histological features that characterize vulnerable plaque: the thickness and density of the fibrous cap, size of the atheroma, and the level of inflammation indicated through lipid deposition. Tonal and texture parameters from NLO images provide objective metrics that correspond to structural and biochemical changes that occur within the vessel wall in early and late stage atherosclerosis.


Journal of Biophotonics | 2011

A comparison of methods using optical coherence tomography to detect demineralized regions in teeth

Mike Sowa; Dan P. Popescu; Friesen; Hewko; Lin-P'ing Choo-Smith

Optical coherence tomography (OCT) is a three- dimensional optical imaging technique that can be used to identify areas of early caries formation in dental enamel. The OCT signal at 850 nm back-reflected from sound enamel is attenuated stronger than the signal back-reflected from demineralized regions. To quantify this observation, the OCT signal as a function of depth into the enamel (also known as the A-scan intensity), the histogram of the A-scan intensities and three summary parameters derived from the A-scan are defined and their diagnostic potential compared. A total of 754 OCT A-scans were analyzed. The three summary parameters derived from the A-scans, the OCT attenuation coefficient as well as the mean and standard deviation of the lognormal fit to the histogram of the A-scan ensemble show statistically significant differences (p < 0.01) when comparing parameters from sound enamel and caries. Furthermore, these parameters only show a modest correlation. Based on the area under the curve (AUC) of the receiver operating characteristics (ROC) plot, the OCT attenuation coefficient shows higher discriminatory capacity (AUC = 0.98) compared to the parameters derived from the lognormal fit to the histogram of the A-scan. However, direct analysis of the A-scans or the histogram of A-scan intensities using linear support vector machine classification shows diagnostic discrimination (AUC = 0.96) comparable to that achieved using the attenuation coefficient. These findings suggest that either direct analysis of the A-scan, its intensity histogram or the attenuation coefficient derived from the descending slope of the OCT A-scan have high capacity to discriminate between regions of caries and sound enamel.


Physics in Medicine and Biology | 2010

Added soft tissue contrast using signal attenuation and the fractal dimension for optical coherence tomography images of porcine arterial tissue

Costel Flueraru; Dan P. Popescu; Youxin Mao; Shoude Chang; Michael G. Sowa

Optical coherence tomography (OCT) images of left-descending coronary tissues harvested from three porcine specimens were acquired with a home-build swept-source OCT setup. Despite the fact that OCT is capable of acquiring high resolution circumferential images of vessels, many distinct histological features of a vessel have comparable optical properties leading to poor contrast in OCT images. Two classification methods were tested in this report for the purpose of enhancing contrast between soft-tissue components of porcine coronary vessels. One method involved analyzing the attenuation of the OCT signal as a function of light penetration into the tissue. We demonstrated that by analyzing the signal attenuation in this manner we were able to differentiate two media sub-layers with different orientations of the smooth muscle cells. The other classification method used in our study was fractal analysis. Fractal analysis was implemented in a box-counting (fractal dimension) image-processing code and was used as a tool to differentiate and quantify variations in tissue texture at various locations in the OCT images. The calculated average fractal dimensions had different values in distinct regions of interest (ROI) within the imaged coronary samples. When compared to the results obtained by using the attenuation of the OCT signal, the method of fractal analysis demonstrated better classification potential for distinguishing amongst the tissue ROI.


International Journal of Biomedical Imaging | 2008

In vitro assessment of optical properties of blood by applying the extended Huygens-Fresnel principle to time-domain optical coherence tomography signal at 1300nm

Dan P. Popescu; Michael G. Sowa

A direct method for the measurement of the optical attenuation coefficient and the scattering anisotropy parameter based on applying the extended Huygens-Fresnel principle to optical coherence tomography images of blood is demonstrated. The images are acquired with a low-power probing beam at the wavelength of 1300 nm. Values of 12.15 mm−1 and 0.95 are found for the total attenuation coefficient and the scattering anisotropy factor, respectively. Also, as a preliminary step, the optical refraction index is determined with a precision of two decimal numbers directly from optical coherence images. The total attenuation coefficient and the scattering anisotropy factor are determined with precisions within experimental error margins of 5% and 2%, respectively. Readable OCT signal is obtained for a maximum propagation of light into blood of 0.25 mm. At the maximum probed depth, the measured signal is almost 103 smaller than its initial intensity when entering the sample.


IEEE Photonics Technology Letters | 2006

Anisotropy of Carrier Transport in the Active Region of Lasers With Self-Assembled InAs Quantum Dashes

Dan P. Popescu; Kevin J. Malloy

Ambipolar carrier migration is investigated for the first time by probing with submicrometer spatial resolution the photoluminescence emitted from the active region of an InAs quantum-dash laser grown on InP. Pumping the nanostructure with two wavelengths, 880 and 940 nm, helps to better understand the transport patterns and the role of the InP substrate. The migration parallel with the dash layer is studied in two directions: along the dash elongation and perpendicular to (across) the elongation. Besides an overall quenching in the presence of dashes, a 20% reduction in migration is observed for the along direction when compared to the across one


Proceedings of SPIE | 2008

Propagation properties of 1300-nm light in blood-saline mixtures determined through optical coherence tomography

Dan P. Popescu; Bernhard J. Schattka; Mark Hewko; Jeri Friesen; Michael G. Sowa

Establishing when the amount of recorded multiple scattered signal becomes dominant is important for various clinical applications that require optical coherence tomography imaging through a turbid environment such as blood. The profiles of detected signals obtained by compounding coherence tomography images of flowing blood-saline mixtures with various blood concentrations are analyzed. The scattering properties of the studied mixtures influence the corresponding profiles of the recorded signal. Monte Carlo simulations of light propagation through environments with various scattering coefficients are used to support and to explain the experimental data.


IEEE Transactions on Instrumentation and Measurement | 2011

High-Quality Tissue Imaging Using a Catheter-Based Swept-Source Optical Coherence Tomography Systems With an Integrated Semiconductor Optical Amplifier

Youxin Mao; Costel Flueraru; Shoude Chang; Dan P. Popescu; Michael G. Sowa

We present the analysis and characteristics of an optical fiber catheter-based swept-source optical coherence tomography (SS-OCT) system for tissue imaging. A quadrature Mach-Zehnder interferometer based on multiport fiber couplers and a semiconductor optical amplifier were employed in our SS-OCT system in order to increase the signal-to-noise ratio, therefore improving image quality deeper within the tissue. We demonstrate OCT images of human skin and arterial tissue acquired with our OCT engine. The results show that this OCT system is an effective imaging modality for real-time diagnosis and in vivo biological applications.

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Michael G. Sowa

National Research Council

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Costel Flueraru

National Research Council

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Shoude Chang

National Research Council

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Youxin Mao

National Research Council

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Mark Hewko

National Research Council

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Jeri Friesen

National Research Council

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Alex C.-T. Ko

National Research Council

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