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I am looking at an optical coherence tomography scheme which is based on a michelson interferometer. The basic idea is that a laser beam is split by a beamsplitter, half of which goes into some tissue and the other half into the reference arm. The tissue backscatters some of the light, the light is recombined with the light from the reference arm and creates interference, which can be used to visualize the tissue to a certain depth.

Now I am trying to combine this scheme with second harmonic generation which usually (?) occurs when an electric field (such as a laser) enters a non-linear medium. What happens is that if the laser with frequency $\omega_0$ enters this medium, another beam will leave the medium which is a mixture of $\omega_0$ and $2\omega_0$ frequencies. These can be then seperated by some prism for example.

Now it is good (depends how you look at it) that some tissues like collagen or cartilage act as non-linear mediums. As such when one tries to look at them in an OCT scheme they will back-scatter not only light with the initial frequency $\omega_0$ but also light with frequency $2\omega_0$.

Scientists have proposed some clever set-ups to be able to harness and use this extra light with frequency $2\omega_0$ to gain more information.

Now my main question: What are some drawbacks of using this method (as in using this second light $2\omega_0$)? In all papers I've read it seems to be strictly superior to the classical OCT method.

The only limiting factor I can think of that it is only possible to use this second harmonic effect in certain tissues which act as non-linear mediums. And even here I am not sure whether this is truly a fundamental limit, hence the title. Could we change the properties of tissue to make them all non-linear if necessary?

So again: What other drawbacks does this method have such that it is not common practice? And maybe...what are some ways to solve/compensate for these problems?

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As you say it only works on limited tissue types. As your links say, Optical Coherence Tomography only works to a depth of 500 um or so.

One thing people do with Positron Emission Tomography is inject glucose that is attached to a radioactive source. Tissues that are metabolicaly active, such as certain cancerous tissues, strongly uptake glucose. These tissues begin to emit pairs of gamma rays. Tomographic techniques can then image the cancerous tissue.

You might look for tracers that contain contain a non-linear optical material and are attracted to tissue of interest.

Given the limited depth, you might need to do a biopsy to be able to read the signal, but at much higher resolution than PET.

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  • $\begingroup$ First thank you for your comment (: 1. I see but depth of 500 um is a general limit of OCT and has nothing to do with second harmonic generation, no? I am specifically interested what issues one might encounter when he tries to combine second harmonic generation with OCT. 2. What are 'tracers' ? Could you maybe explain the sentence 'You might look for tracers that contain contain a non-linear optical material and are attracted to tissue of interest.' a bit more? $\endgroup$
    – CatoMaths
    Apr 28, 2019 at 20:45
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    $\begingroup$ 1) I was assuming that if OCT won't work below 500 um, then a second harmonic variant won't either. OCT uses an interferometer with a sample and a mirror. The 2nd harmonic version uses a non-linear sample that doubles frequency and a non-linear "mirror". The light source has a very short coherence length, and this limits the depth. 2) The PET link explains radioactive tracers. I was thinking of something similar, but with non-linear material replacing the radioactive atoms. I don't know if such a thing is possible. $\endgroup$
    – mmesser314
    Apr 28, 2019 at 20:59
  • $\begingroup$ Perfect thanks! If you have access, I have found something in this paper: osapublishing.org/ol/abstract.cfm?uri=ol-30-18-2391 'Fig. 4(B) suggests that some of the signal may be due to the second-harmonic light generated in the forward direction, which is backscattered from underlying structures. The forward generation of the second-harmonic signal is a drawback to this molecular contrast technique, and care must be taken when interpreting the images.' Do you have any idea how one could counteract this/deal with this drawback? $\endgroup$
    – CatoMaths
    Apr 28, 2019 at 22:28

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