41 127

Cited 0 times in

Quantitative Measurements of Red Blood Cell Indices Using Spectroscopic Differential Phase-Contrast Microscopy

Authors
 Taegyun Moon  ;  Andrew Heegeon Yang  ;  Seungri Song  ;  Malith Ranathunga  ;  Yea-Jin Song  ;  Mi-Sook Yang  ;  Jaewoo Song  ;  Chulmin Joo 
Citation
 Chemical & Biomedical Imaging, Vol.1(8) : 750-759, 2023-11 
Journal Title
Chemical & Biomedical Imaging
Issue Date
2023-11
Keywords
red blood cell indices ; quantitative phase imaging ; image-based cytometry ; incoherent imaging ; differential phase-contrast microscopy
Abstract
Red blood cell (RBC) indices serve as clinically important parameters for diagnosing various blood-related diseases. Conventional hematology analyzers provide the highly accurate detection of RBC indices but require large blood volumes (>1 mL), and the results are bulk mean values averaged over a large number of RBCs. Moreover, they do not provide quantitative information related to the morphological and chemical alteration of RBCs at the single-cell level. Recently, quantitative phase imaging (QPI) methods have been introduced as viable detection platforms for RBC indices. However, coherent QPI methods are built on complex optical setups and suffer from coherent speckle noise, which limits their detection accuracy and precision. Here, we present spectroscopic differential phase-contrast (sDPC) microscopy as a platform for measuring RBC indices. sDPC is a computational microscope that produces color-dependent phase images with higher spatial resolution and reduced speckle noise compared to coherent QPIs. Using these spectroscopic phase images and computational algorithms, RBC indices can be extracted with high accuracy. We experimentally demonstrate that sDPC enables the high-accuracy measurement of the mean corpuscular hemoglobin concentration, mean corpuscular volume, mean corpuscular hemoglobin, red cell distribution width, hematocrit, hemoglobin concentration, and RBC count with errors smaller than 7% as compared to a clinical hematology analyzer based on flow cytometry (XN-2000; Sysmex, Kobe, Japan). We further validate the clinical utility of the sDPC method by measuring and comparing the RBC indices of the control and anemic groups against those obtained using the clinical hematology analyzer.
Files in This Item:
T202307570.pdf Download
DOI
10.1021/cbmi.3c00090
Appears in Collections:
1. College of Medicine (의과대학) > Dept. of Laboratory Medicine (진단검사의학교실) > 1. Journal Papers
Yonsei Authors
Song, Jae Woo(송재우) ORCID logo https://orcid.org/0000-0002-1877-5731
URI
https://ir.ymlib.yonsei.ac.kr/handle/22282913/197806
사서에게 알리기
  feedback

qrcode

Items in DSpace are protected by copyright, with all rights reserved, unless otherwise indicated.

Browse

Links