Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: https://dspace.iiti.ac.in/handle/123456789/5904
Title: Quantitative Differentiation of Pneumonia from Normal Lungs: Diagnostic Assessment Using Photoacoustic Spectral Response
Authors: Kumari, Anshu
Vasudevan, Srivathsan
Gupta, Sharad
Keywords: Developing countries;Elasticity;Photoacoustic effect;Diagnostic tools;Mechano-biology;Median frequency;Pneumonia;Spectral energy;Spectral parameters;Spectral response;Tissue mimicking phantom;Diagnosis;animal;biomechanics;devices;elastography;equipment design;goat;imaging phantom;lung;pathology;photoacoustics;pneumonia;procedures;Animals;Biomechanical Phenomena;Elasticity Imaging Techniques;Equipment Design;Goats;Lung;Phantoms, Imaging;Photoacoustic Techniques;Pneumonia
Issue Date: 2017
Publisher: SAGE Publications Inc.
Citation: Biswas, D., Kumari, A., Chen, G. C. K., Vasudevan, S., Gupta, S., Shukla, S., & Garg, U. K. (2017). Quantitative differentiation of pneumonia from normal lungs: Diagnostic assessment using photoacoustic spectral response. Applied Spectroscopy, 71(11), 2532-2537. doi:10.1177/0003702817708320
Abstract: Pneumonia is an acute lung infection that takes life of many young children in developing countries. Early stage (red hepatization) detection of pneumonia would be pragmatic to control mortality rate. Detection of this disease at early stages demands the knowledge of pathology, making it difficult to screen noninvasively. We propose photoacoustic spectral response (PASR), a noninvasive elasticity-dependent technique for early stage pneumonia detection. We report the quantitative red hepatization detection of pneumonia through median frequency, spectral energy, and variance. Significant contrast in spectral parameters due to change in sample elasticity is found. The tissue-mimicking phantom study illustrates a 39% increase in median frequency for 1.5 times the change in density. On applying to formalin-fixed pneumonia-affected goat lungs, it provides a distinct change in spectral parameters between pneumonia affected areas and normal lungs. The obtained PASR results were found to be highly correlating to standard histopathology. The proposed technique therefore has potential to be a regular diagnostic tool for early pneumonia detection. © 2017, © The Author(s) 2017.
URI: https://doi.org/10.1177/0003702817708320
https://dspace.iiti.ac.in/handle/123456789/5904
ISSN: 0003-7028
Type of Material: Journal Article
Appears in Collections:Department of Electrical Engineering

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