Four-dimensional cardiac imaging in living embryos<? xpp qa?> via postacquisition synchronization of nongated<? xpp qa?> slice sequences

M Liebling, AS Forouhar, M Gharib… - … of biomedical optics, 2005 - spiedigitallibrary.org
Journal of biomedical optics, 2005spiedigitallibrary.org
Being able to acquire, visualize, and analyze 3D time series (4D data) from living embryos
makes it possible to understand complex dynamic movements at early stages of embryonic
development. Despite recent technological breakthroughs in 2D dynamic imaging, confocal
microscopes remain quite slow at capturing optical sections at successive depths. However,
when the studied motion is periodic—such as for a beating heart—a way to circumvent this
problem is to acquire, successively, sets of 2 D+ time slice sequences at increasing depths …
Being able to acquire, visualize, and analyze 3D time series (4D data) from living embryos makes it possible to understand complex dynamic movements at early stages of embryonic development. Despite recent technological breakthroughs in 2D dynamic imaging, confocal microscopes remain quite slow at capturing optical sections at successive depths. However, when the studied motion is periodic—such as for a beating heart—a way to circumvent this problem is to acquire, successively, sets of slice sequences at increasing depths over at least one time period and later rearrange them to recover a sequence. In other imaging modalities at macroscopic scales, external gating signals, e.g., an electro-cardiogram, have been used to achieve proper synchronization. Since gating signals are either unavailable or cumbersome to acquire in microscopic organisms, we have developed a procedure to reconstruct volumes based solely on the information contained in the image sequences. The central part of the algorithm is a least-squares minimization of an objective criterion that depends on the similarity between the data from neighboring depths. Owing to a wavelet-based multiresolution approach, our method is robust to common confocal microscopy artifacts. We validate the procedure on both simulated data and in vivo measurements from living zebrafish embryos.
SPIE Digital Library