Journal of Innovative Optical Health Sciences (Sep 2014)

Multimodal nonlinear imaging of atherosclerotic plaques differentiation of triglyceride and cholesterol deposits

  • Christian Matthäus,
  • Riccardo Cicchi,
  • Tobias Meyer,
  • Annika Lattermann,
  • Michael Schmitt,
  • Bernd F. M. Romeike,
  • Christoph Krafft,
  • Benjamin Dietzek,
  • Bernhard R. Brehm,
  • Francesco S. Pavone,
  • Jürgen Popp

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1142/S1793545814500278
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 7, no. 5
pp. 1450027-1 – 1450027-10

Abstract

Read online

Cardiovascular diseases in general and atherothrombosis as the most common of its individual disease entities is the leading cause of death in the developed countries. Therefore, visualization and characterization of inner arterial plaque composition is of vital diagnostic interest, especially for the early recognition of vulnerable plaques. Established clinical techniques provide valuable morphological information but cannot deliver information about the chemical composition of individual plaques. Therefore, spectroscopic imaging techniques have recently drawn considerable attention. Based on the spectroscopic properties of the individual plaque components, as for instance different types of lipids, the composition of atherosclerotic plaques can be analyzed qualitatively as well as quantitatively. Here, we compare the feasibility of multimodal nonlinear imaging combining two-photon fluorescence (TPF), coherent anti-Stokes Raman scattering (CARS) and second-harmonic generation (SHG) microscopy to contrast composition and morphology of lipid deposits against the surrounding matrix of connective tissue with diffraction limited spatial resolution. In this contribution, the spatial distribution of major constituents of the arterial wall and atherosclerotic plaques like elastin, collagen, triglycerides and cholesterol can be simultaneously visualized by a combination of nonlinear imaging methods, providing a powerful label-free complement to standard histopathological methods with great potential for in vivo application.

Keywords