Abstract

Biological systems undergo constant dynamic changes across various spatial and temporal scales. To investigate the intricate biological dynamics in living organisms, there is a strong need for high-speed and high-resolution imaging capabilities with significant imaging depth. In this work, we present high-spatiotemporal resolution microwave-induced thermoacoustic tomography (HR-MTAT) as a method for imaging biological dynamics in deep tissues. HR-MTAT utilizes nanosecond pulsed microwave excitation and ultrasound detection, with appropriate spatial configurations, to achieve high coupling of the sample to the microwaves, to produce images in soft tissue with dielectric contrast and sub-millimeter spatial resolution (230 μm), to a depth of a few centimeters. Notably, by employing a 128-channel parallel signal acquisition and digitization strategy, the field programmable gate array module manages data synthesis, and GPU-based parallel pixel reconstruction facilitates HR-MTAT to accomplish single-frame image reconstruction in an impressive 50 μs. The practical feasibility of HR-MTAT was evaluated in live mice. The results show that HR-MTAT can noninvasively image whole-body small animals (up to 60 mm in depth) with clear resolution of internal organ structures at a frame rate of 100 Hz, without the need for labeling. At this high spatiotemporal resolution, HR-MTAT can capture respiration, heartbeat, and arterial pulse propagation without motion artifacts and track bio-nanoprobes in livers and tumors. These findings demonstrate HR-MTAT's ability to perform dynamic imaging with high contrast and resolution in deep tissues.

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