Multimodal nonlinear endomicroscopic imaging probe using a double-core double-clad fiber and focus-combining micro-optical concept

Ekaterina Pshenay-Severin(Grintech (Germany)), Hyeonsoo Bae(Leibniz Institute of Photonic Technology), Karl Reichwald(Grintech (Germany)), Gregor Matz(Grintech (Germany)), Jörg Bierlich(Leibniz Institute of Photonic Technology), Jens Kobelke(Leibniz Institute of Photonic Technology), Adrian Lorenz(Leibniz Institute of Photonic Technology), Anka Schwuchow(Leibniz Institute of Photonic Technology), Tobias Meyer‐Zedler(Helmholtz Institute Jena), Michael Schmitt(Helmholtz Institute Jena), Bernhard Messerschmidt(Grintech (Germany)), Jürgen Popp(Helmholtz Institute Jena)
Light Science & Applications
October 5, 2021
Cited by 71Open Access
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Abstract

Multimodal non-linear microscopy combining coherent anti-Stokes Raman scattering, second harmonic generation, and two-photon excited fluorescence has proved to be a versatile and powerful tool enabling the label-free investigation of tissue structure, molecular composition, and correlation with function and disease status. For a routine medical application, the implementation of this approach into an in vivo imaging endoscope is required. However, this is a difficult task due to the requirements of a multicolour ultrashort laser delivery from a compact and robust laser source through a fiber with low losses and temporal synchronization, the efficient signal collection in epi-direction, the need for small-diameter but highly corrected endomicroobjectives of high numerical aperture and compact scanners. Here, we introduce an ultra-compact fiber-scanning endoscope platform for multimodal non-linear endomicroscopy in combination with a compact four-wave mixing based fiber laser. The heart of this fiber-scanning endoscope is an in-house custom-designed, single mode, double clad, double core pure silica fiber in combination with a 2.4 mm diameter NIR-dual-waveband corrected endomicroscopic objective of 0.55 numerical aperture and 180 µm field of view for non-linear imaging, allowing a background free, low-loss, high peak power laser delivery, and an efficient signal collection in backward direction. A linear diffractive optical grating overlays pump and Stokes laser foci across the full field of view, such that diffraction-limited performance is demonstrated for tissue imaging at one frame per second with sub-micron spatial resolution and at a high transmission of 65% from the laser to the specimen using a distal resonant fiber scanner.


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