Department of Physics, Indian Institute of Technology Delhi, New Delhi, 110016, India.
Phase Laboratories Pvt. Ltd., Technology Based Incubation Unit, Indian Institute of Technology Delhi, New Delhi, 110016, India.
J Microsc. 2020 Aug;279(2):114-122. doi: 10.1111/jmi.12924. Epub 2020 Jun 5.
Digital holographic microscopy (DHM) is an important technique that may be used for quantitative phase imaging of unstained biological cell samples. Since the DHM technology is not commonly used in clinics or bioscience research labs, at present there is no well-accepted focusing criterion for unstained samples that users can follow while recording image plane digital holograms of cells. The usual sharpness metrics that are useful for auto-focusing of stained cells do not work well for unstained cells as there is no amplitude contrast. In this work, we report a practical method for estimating the best focus plane for unstained cells in the digital hologram domain. The method is based on an interesting observation that for the best focus plane the fringe pattern associated with individual unstained cells predominantly shows phase modulation effect in the form of bending of fringes and minimal amplitude modulation. This criterion when applied to unstained red blood cells shows that the central dip in the doughnut-like phase profile of cells is maximal in this plane. The proposed methodology is helpful for standardizing the usage of DHM technology across different users and application development efforts. LAY DESCRIPTION: Digital holographic microscopy (DHM) is slowly but steadily becoming an important microscopy modality and gaining acceptability for basic bio-science research as well as clinical usage. One of the important features of DHM is that it allows users to perform quantitative imaging of unstained transparent cells. Instead of using dyes or fluorescent labelling, DHM systems use quantitative phase as a contrast mechanism which depends on the natural refractive index variation within the cell samples. Since minimal wet lab processing is required in order to image cell samples with a DHM, cells can be imaged in their natural state. While DHM is gaining popularity among users, the imaging protocols across the labs or users need to be standardized in order to make sure that the same quantitative phase parameters are used for tasks such as quantitative phased based cell classification. One of the important operational tasks for any microscopy work is to focus the sample under study. While focusing comes naturally to users of brightfield microscopes based on image contrast, the focusing is not straightforward when samples are unstained so that they do not offer any amplitude contrast. When performing quantitative phase imaging, defocus can actually change the phase profile of the cell due to near-zone (Fresnel) diffraction effects. So unless a standardized focusing methodology is used, it will be difficult for multiple DHM users (potentially at different sites) to agree on quantitative results out of their phase images. DHM literature has prior works which perform numerical focusing of recovered complex wave-field in the hologram plane to find the best focus plane. However such methods are not user friendly and do not allow user the same focusing experience as in a brightfield microscope. The numerical focusing is therefore a reasonably good method for an optics researcher but not necessarily so for a microscopy technician looking at cell samples with a DHM system in a clinical setting. The present work provides a simple focusing criterion for unstained samples that works directly in the hologram domain. The technique is based on an interesting observation that the when an unstained cell sample is in the best-focus plane, its corresponding hologram (or fringe pattern) predominantly shows phase modulation manifested by bending of fringes at the location of the cell. This criterion can be converted into a simple numerical method as we have used to find the best-focus plane using a stack of through focus holograms. We believe that the technique can be used manually by visually observing the holograms or can be converted to an auto-focus algorithm for a motorized DHM system.
数字全息显微镜 (DHM) 是一种重要的技术,可用于对未染色的生物细胞样本进行定量相位成像。由于 DHM 技术在临床或生物科学研究实验室中尚未广泛应用,因此目前还没有用户在记录细胞的图像平面数字全息图时可以遵循的针对未染色样本的公认聚焦标准。对于未染色的细胞,通常用于自动聚焦的锐度指标效果不佳,因为不存在幅度对比度。在这项工作中,我们报告了一种用于估计数字全息图中未染色细胞最佳聚焦平面的实用方法。该方法基于一个有趣的观察结果,即对于最佳聚焦平面,与单个未染色细胞相关的条纹图案主要表现出相位调制效应,形式为条纹弯曲和最小幅度调制。将该标准应用于未染色的红细胞时,表明细胞的环状相位分布的中心凹陷在该平面上最大。所提出的方法有助于在不同用户和应用开发工作中标准化 DHM 技术的使用。
数字全息显微镜 (DHM) 正逐渐成为一种重要的显微镜模式,并在基础生物科学研究以及临床应用中获得了认可。DHM 的一个重要特点是它允许用户对未染色的透明细胞进行定量成像。DHM 系统不使用染料或荧光标记,而是使用定量相位作为对比度机制,这取决于细胞样本内的自然折射率变化。由于使用 DHM 对细胞样本进行成像所需的湿实验室处理很少,因此可以在其自然状态下对细胞进行成像。虽然 DHM 在用户中越来越受欢迎,但实验室或用户之间的成像协议需要标准化,以确保用于基于定量相位的细胞分类等任务的相同定量相位参数。任何显微镜工作的重要操作任务之一是聚焦正在研究的样本。虽然基于图像对比度的明场显微镜用户自然会进行聚焦,但当样本未染色而不提供任何幅度对比度时,聚焦就不那么直接了。在进行定量相位成像时,由于近场(菲涅耳)衍射效应,离焦实际上会改变细胞的相位分布。因此,除非使用标准化的聚焦方法,否则多个 DHM 用户(可能位于不同地点)很难就其相位图像中的定量结果达成一致。DHM 文献中有一些针对恢复全息图平面中的复波场以找到最佳聚焦平面的数值聚焦工作。然而,这种方法对用户不友好,并且不像在明场显微镜中那样允许用户具有相同的聚焦体验。因此,对于在临床环境中使用 DHM 系统观察细胞样本的显微镜技术人员来说,数值聚焦是一种相当好的方法,但对于光学研究人员来说则不一定。目前的工作为未染色样本提供了一种简单的聚焦标准,该标准直接在全息图域中工作。该技术基于一个有趣的观察结果,即当未染色的细胞样本处于最佳聚焦平面时,其对应的全息图(或条纹图案)主要表现出相位调制,表现为细胞位置处的条纹弯曲。我们已经使用通过聚焦的全息图堆栈将此标准转换为一种简单的数值方法,以找到最佳聚焦平面。我们相信,该技术可以通过手动观察全息图来使用,也可以转换为用于带电机的 DHM 系统的自动聚焦算法。