Gastrointestinal Endoscopy
Volume 66, Issue 5 , Pages 1001-1007, November 2007

High-resolution miniprobe-based confocal microscopy in combination with video mosaicing (with video)

Current affiliations: II Department of Medicine (V. B., C. P., R. M. S., A. M.) and Department of Pathology (C. H. v. W.), Klinikum rechts der Isar, Technical University of Munich, Munich, Germany, Mauna Kea Technologies/Asclepios Research Team, Institut National de la Recherche Informatique et Automatique (T. V.), Sophia Antipolis, France

Received 24 January 2007; accepted 12 April 2007. published online 04 September 2007.

Munich, Germany, Paris, France

Background

A new portable confocal laser microscopy system has recently been developed.

Objective

Our purpose was to evaluate the feasibility of performing real-time microscopic imaging with a prototype of a new high-resolution miniprobe in conjunction with a video mosaicing algorithm.

Design

Feasibility study.

Setting

Tertiary referral center at a large university hospital.

Patients

Seven patients referred for endoscopy for various indications.

Main Outcome Measurements

High-resolution laser microscopy of the upper and lower GI tract was performed with standard endoscopes. Seven to 10 mL of 1% fluorescein was injected intravenously a few seconds before the procedure. No additional preparation was required. The prototype used has a lateral resolution of 1.2 μm and an axial resolution of 3 μm with a total field of 240 × 200 μm. From all stored video sequences a video mosaicing algorithm was used to combine the successive individual images, cancel motion artifacts, and reconstitute panoramas of the tissues.

Results

Cell-to-cell borders, single cell structures, and mucosal inflammation was readily detectable. By the use of the mosaicing algorithm, the image area could be increased 2- to 4-fold, and image definition could be further enhanced to allow finer detail visualization.

Limitations

Low number of patients, early feasibility study.

Conclusions

Our preliminary data show that high-resolution miniprobe-based confocal fluorescence microscopy in conjunction with video mosaicing has the potential to provide images similar to standard histopathologic studies. Dynamic images with a smaller field of view can be combined to reconstruct still images of high resolution covering a fairly large area.

Abbreviation: CFM, confocal fluorescence laser microscopy

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PII: S0016-5107(07)01820-2

doi:10.1016/j.gie.2007.04.015

Gastrointestinal Endoscopy
Volume 66, Issue 5 , Pages 1001-1007, November 2007