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Browsing by Author "Young, P. A."
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Item The effects of refractive index heterogeneity within kidney tissue on multiphoton fluorescence excitation microscopy(Wiley Blackwell (Blackwell Publishing), 2011-05) Young, P. A.; Clendenon, S. G.; Byars, J. M.; Dunn, K. W.; Department of Medicine, IU School of MedicineAlthough multiphoton fluorescence excitation microscopy has improved the depth at which useful fluorescence images can be collected in biological tissues, the reach of multiphoton fluorescence excitation microscopy is nonetheless limited by tissue scattering and spherical aberration. Scattering can be reduced in fixed samples by mounting in a medium whose refractive index closely matches that of the fixed material. Using optical 'clearing', the effects of refractive index heterogeneity on signal attenuation with depth are investigated. Quantitative measurements show that by mounting kidney tissue in a high refractive index medium, less than 50% of signal attenuates in 100 μm of depth.Item The effects of spherical aberration on multiphoton fluorescence excitation microscopy(Wiley Blackwell (Blackwell Publishing), 2011-05) Young, P. A.; Clendenon, S. G.; Byars, J. M.; Decca, R. S.; Dunn, K. W.; Department of Medicine, IU School of MedicineMultiphoton fluorescence excitation microscopy is almost invariably conducted with samples whose refractive index differ from that of the objective immersion medium, conditions that cause spherical aberration. Due to the quadratic nature of multiphoton fluorescence excitation, spherical aberration is expected to profoundly affect the depth dependence of fluorescence excitation. In order to determine the effect of refractive index mismatch in multiphoton fluorescence excitation microscopy, we measured signal attenuation, photobleaching rates and resolution degradation with depth in homogeneous samples with minimal light scattering and absorption over a range of refractive indices. These studies demonstrate that signal levels and resolution both rapidly decline with depth into refractive index mismatched samples. Analyses of photobleaching rates indicate that the preponderance of signal attenuation with depth results from decreased rates of fluorescence excitation, even in a system with a descanned emission collection pathway. Similar results were obtained in analyses of fluorescence microspheres embedded in rat kidney tissue, demonstrating that spherical aberration is an important limiting factor in multiphoton fluorescence excitation microscopy of biological samples.