08 July 2012
Feasibility of digitally stained multimodal confocal mosaics to simulate histopathology
Dan Gareau
Fluorescence confocal mosaicing microscopy of tissue biopsies
stained with acridine orange has been shown to accurately
identify tumors and with an overall sensitivity of 96.6% and specificity
of 89.2%. However, fluorescence shows only nuclear detail similar to
hematoxylin in histopathology and does not show collagen or cytoplasm,
which may provide necessary negative contrast information
similar to eosin used in histopathology. Reflectance mode contrast is
sensitive to collagen and cytoplasm without staining. To further improve
sensitivity and specificity, digitally stained confocal mosaics
combine confocal fluorescence and reflectance images in a multimodal
pseudo-color image to mimic the appearance of histopathology
with hematoxylin and eosin and facilitate the introduction of confocal
microscopy into the clinical realm. © 2009 Society of Photo-Optical Instrumentation
Engineers. DOI: 10.1117/1.3149853