The use of optical fiber sensors in medical field is based on their ability to transmit light over great distances with low power loss and the interaction of the light with a measurand system.
These sensors are electrically passive and hence immune to electromagnetic disturbances. Optical fibres are geometrically flexible and corrosion resistant. They can be miniaturized and are most suitable for telemetry applications.
Optical fiber sensors find important use in various medical applications; they can be used to measure physical variables like pressure, temperature, strain and displacement. Other optical fibres are used to sense chemicals plus other uses discussed later in this post.
The optical transducers are based on glass, or plastic fibres about 100 to 250 μm in diameter.
Basically, in an optical fiber sensor, the sensing element is attached to one end of the fiber. It varies on one parameter like the intensity, phase, polarization, wavelength of transit time of light through the fiber. Sensors that vary on the intensity of light are simple and require only a source and a detector.
Find out more about: Fingertip Pulse Oximeter Blood Oxygen Saturation Monitor
Optical fiber sensors and transducers can be classified into 3 main types as follows:
Physical parameters like pressure and temperature can be measured by optical fiber sensors. These sensors are based on the attachment of an optical transducer at the end of an optical fiber.
Temperature Sensing
The sensing element is deposited directly on the cleaved end of the optical fiber and the temperature is deduced from the phase of the reflected light or its spectrum. There are various kinds of sensors for temperature and pressure measurement in oil wells. The sensing element can be semiconductor, a phosphor, or a metal or a liquid crystal.
The figure below shows a metal deposited at one end of the fiber:
Temperature ranging from -100 °C to 400 °C can be measured. Some fibers measure temperature along the length of the fiber, and give an average of the output.
The greatest advantage of fiber optic, temperature sensors is their complete immunity to Electromagnetic Interference (EMI), Radio Frequency Interference (RFI), high voltage and electrical interference.
In the temperature measurement system above, the light is emitted by an LED, transmitted to and from crystal via optical fibres and measured by a photodetector. No metal parts are used in the probe design, resulting in transparency of the probe to electromagnetic fields.
Typical Medical applications of Optical fiber Temperature sensors
The production of localized and controlled hyperthermia i.e. elevated temperatures in the range of 42 -45 °C or higher for cancer treatment by electromagnetic energy, either the Radio frequency (RF), or Microwave frequency range, poses a difficult temperature measurement problem. Traditional temperature sensors, such as thermistors or thermocouples have metallic components and connecting wires which perturb the incident electromagnet (EM) fields and may cause localized heating spots and the temperature readings may be erratic due to interference. This problem is effectively, overcome by using temperature sensors based on fiber optics. These optical fiber devices utilize externally induced changes in the transmission characteristic of the optical fibers and offer typical advantages of optical fibres such as flexibility, small dimensions and immunity to electromagnetic interference.
Pressure Sensors
Measurement of intracranial and intracardiac pressure can be performed by using fiber optic sensors. For intracranial pressure measurement, the device is based on a pressure balancing system. Here static pressure is to be monitored and a sensor based on the deflection of a cantilever mirror attached to membrane. Deflection of the membrane causes the light emitted from centre optical fiber to be reflected differentially towards either of the two collecting fibers located on each side of the control fiber. The ratio of the light collected by two different fibers is sensed and suitable feedback air pressure is applied to the interior of the probe through the pneumatic connecting tube, balancing the membrane to its null position and providing readout of the balancing pressure.
With a few changes in the design, this same principle is also applied for monitoring intravascular pressure.
The principle of operation of optical fiber photometric sensors is based on the light emanating from a fiber end that is scattered or fluoresced back into the fiber, allowing measurement of the returning light as an indication of the optical absorption or fluorescence of the volume at the fiber tip.
The variations in the returning light are sensed using a photodetector. Such sensors monitor the variations in amplitude or frequency of the reflected light. Examples of medical applications of the photometric sensors include:
The optical sensing of chemical species is based on the interaction of these entities with light. When light strikes a substance, a variety of interaction may occur between the photons of the electromagnetic radiation and the molecules of the substance. These interactions involve an exchange of energy and may lead to absorption, transmission, emission, scattering or reflection of light. The quantized nature of this energy transfer produces important information about the composition of the system and this forms the basis of the spectroscopic method of chemical analysis.
We have 2 types of optical fiber sensors used in chemical measurement.
You can also read: Spectrophotometry Instrumentatl Method of Chemical Analysis
Reliable temperature measurement is dependent on several factors that, more or less, inexorably lead to…
Because of the different refractive index of a cell membrane compared to the bathing solution,…
Confocal Microscopy Technique In conventional microscopy, the specimen is usually mounted on a glass slide…
A cardiac pacemaker is normally used to produce pulses that force the heart to beat…
Electroporation is a technique that utilizes intense pulses of electricity to ‘punch’ holes in cell…
Single Photon Emission Tomography (SPECT) is a technique for producing 3D images from 2D images…