Quantitative phase-digital holographic microscopy: a new imaging modality to identify original cellular biomarkers of diseases
Quantitative phase microscopy (QPM) has recently emerged as a powerful label-free technique in the field of living cell imaging allowing to non-invasively measure with a nanometric axial sensitivity cell structure and dynamics. Since the phase retardation of a light wave when transmitted through the observed cells, namely the quantitative phase signal (QPS), is sensitive to both cellular thickness and intracellular refractive index related to the cellular content, its accurate analysis allows to derive various cell parameters and monitor specific cell processes, which are very likely to identify new cell biomarkers. Specifically, quantitative phase-digital holographic microscopy (QP-DHM), thanks to its numerical flexibility facilitating parallelization and automation processes, represents an appealing imaging modality to both identify original cellular biomarkers of diseases as well to explore the underlying pathophysiological processes.
WOS:000380605300015
2016
978-1-62841-952-8
Bellingham
8
Proceedings of SPIE
9718
97180K
REVIEWED
Event name | Event place | Event date |
San Francisco, CA | FEB 14-17, 2016 | |