Abstract: A spectroscopic system for quantifying in vivo concentration of an absorptive pigment in biological tissue includes an oscillator for generating a first carrier waveform of a first frequency on the order of 108 Hz, a light source for generating light of a selected wavelengths modulated by the carrier waveform, and a detector for detecting radiation that has migrated over photon migration paths in the tissue from an input port to a detection port spaced several centimeters apart. The wavelength is sensitive to concentration of an absorptive pigment present in the tissue. A phase detector compares the detected radiation with the introduced radiation and determines therefrom the phase shift of the detected radiation. A processor quantifies the concentration of the absorptive pigment by calculating a value of the absorption coefficient.
Abstract: A spectroscopic system for quantifying in vivo concentration of an absorptive pigment in biological tissue includes an oscillator for generating a first carrier waveform of a first frequency on the order of 108 Hz, a light source for generating light of at least two selected wavelengths modulated by the carrier waveform, and a detector for detecting radiation that has migrated over photon migration paths in the tissue from an input port to a detection port spaced several centimeters apart. At least one of the wavelengths is sensitive to concentration of an absorptive pigment present in the tissue, while the tissue exhibits similar scattering properties at the two wavelengths. A phase detector compares, at each wavelength, the detected radiation with the introduced radiation and determines therefrom the phase shift of the detected radiation at each wavelength.