Nanoscale quantitative surface roughness measurement of articular cartilage using second-order statistical-based biospeckle.

Quantitative measurement of nanoscale surface roughness of articular cartilage tissue is significant to assess the surface topography for early treatment of osteoarthritis, the most common joint disease worldwide. Since it was not established by clinical diagnostic tools, the current studies have be...

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Main Authors: Doaa Youssef, Salah Hassab-Elnaby, Hatem El-Ghandoor
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Public Library of Science (PLoS) 2021-01-01
Series:PLoS ONE
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0246395
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spelling doaj-4b0614d54f4249f9b368630e32d8e3b42021-06-25T04:31:29ZengPublic Library of Science (PLoS)PLoS ONE1932-62032021-01-01161e024639510.1371/journal.pone.0246395Nanoscale quantitative surface roughness measurement of articular cartilage using second-order statistical-based biospeckle.Doaa YoussefSalah Hassab-ElnabyHatem El-GhandoorQuantitative measurement of nanoscale surface roughness of articular cartilage tissue is significant to assess the surface topography for early treatment of osteoarthritis, the most common joint disease worldwide. Since it was not established by clinical diagnostic tools, the current studies have been suggesting the use of alternative diagnostic tools using pre-clinical methods. This study aims to measure the nanoscale surface roughness of articular cartilage tissue utilizing biospeckle which is used as a non-destructive and non-contact optical imaging technique. An experimental setup was implemented to capture biospeckle images from twelve cross-section areas of articular cartilage tissue gathered from bovine knee joints at 632 nm wavelength laser radiation. Then, to analyze the biospeckle image, a second-order statistical-based method was proposed through the combination of 308 highly correlated statistical features extracted from implemented gray-level co-occurrence matrices by employing principal component analysis. The result indicated that the measurement of the nanoscale surface roughness based on the first principal component only is able to provide accurate and precise quantitative measurement of early signs of articular cartilage degeneration up to 2500 nm.https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0246395
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Doaa Youssef
Salah Hassab-Elnaby
Hatem El-Ghandoor
spellingShingle Doaa Youssef
Salah Hassab-Elnaby
Hatem El-Ghandoor
Nanoscale quantitative surface roughness measurement of articular cartilage using second-order statistical-based biospeckle.
PLoS ONE
author_facet Doaa Youssef
Salah Hassab-Elnaby
Hatem El-Ghandoor
author_sort Doaa Youssef
title Nanoscale quantitative surface roughness measurement of articular cartilage using second-order statistical-based biospeckle.
title_short Nanoscale quantitative surface roughness measurement of articular cartilage using second-order statistical-based biospeckle.
title_full Nanoscale quantitative surface roughness measurement of articular cartilage using second-order statistical-based biospeckle.
title_fullStr Nanoscale quantitative surface roughness measurement of articular cartilage using second-order statistical-based biospeckle.
title_full_unstemmed Nanoscale quantitative surface roughness measurement of articular cartilage using second-order statistical-based biospeckle.
title_sort nanoscale quantitative surface roughness measurement of articular cartilage using second-order statistical-based biospeckle.
publisher Public Library of Science (PLoS)
series PLoS ONE
issn 1932-6203
publishDate 2021-01-01
description Quantitative measurement of nanoscale surface roughness of articular cartilage tissue is significant to assess the surface topography for early treatment of osteoarthritis, the most common joint disease worldwide. Since it was not established by clinical diagnostic tools, the current studies have been suggesting the use of alternative diagnostic tools using pre-clinical methods. This study aims to measure the nanoscale surface roughness of articular cartilage tissue utilizing biospeckle which is used as a non-destructive and non-contact optical imaging technique. An experimental setup was implemented to capture biospeckle images from twelve cross-section areas of articular cartilage tissue gathered from bovine knee joints at 632 nm wavelength laser radiation. Then, to analyze the biospeckle image, a second-order statistical-based method was proposed through the combination of 308 highly correlated statistical features extracted from implemented gray-level co-occurrence matrices by employing principal component analysis. The result indicated that the measurement of the nanoscale surface roughness based on the first principal component only is able to provide accurate and precise quantitative measurement of early signs of articular cartilage degeneration up to 2500 nm.
url https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0246395
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AT hatemelghandoor nanoscalequantitativesurfaceroughnessmeasurementofarticularcartilageusingsecondorderstatisticalbasedbiospeckle
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