Abstract:
A laser system for a spectroscopic catheter system utilizes an overmoded cavity in order to reduce mode hoping induced power fluctuations during wavelength scanning. In the preferred embodiment, a semiconductor gain medium is used to reduce cost. A fiber pigtail is used to define the laser cavity, which has a tight cavity mode spacing of less that 15 Gigahertz. A diffraction grating is used as the tuning element. A cylindrical lens is used to reduce alignment tolerances and thereby increase manufacturability.

Description:
RELATED APPLICATIONS  
       [0001]     This application is a Division of U.S. patent application Ser. No. 10/314,648, filed on Dec. 9, 2002, which is incorporated herein by reference in its entirety. 
     
    
     BACKGROUND OF THE INVENTION  
       [0002]     Tunable laser sources are applicable to a number of diagnostic and therapeutic medical applications. Optical coherence tomography is used to provide spatial resolution, enabling the imaging of internal structures. Spectroscopy is used to characterize the composition of structures, enabling the diagnosis of medical conditions, by differentiating between cancerous, dysplastic, and normal cellular structures. Fluorescence and exogenous chromospores can be used to increase the signal to noise ratio in these processes, providing for more accurate diagnostics.  
         [0003]     For example, in one configuration for spectroscopy, the tunable laser source is used to scan a spectral band of interest, such as a scan band in the near infrared or 850 nanometers (nm) to 1-2 micrometers (μm), for example. The generated light is used to illuminate tissue in a target area. Diffusely reflected light resulting from the illumination is then collected and transmitted to a detector. By correlating the scanning of the tunable laser source to the time varying response of the detector, the spectral response of the target area tissue can be resolved. Statistical techniques can be further used to extract useful information from even low-resolution spectral data. For example, chemometrics, which combines spectroscopy and mathematics, can provide clear qualitative as well as quantitative information.  
         [0004]     One specific example of an application for spectroscopy concerns the diagnosis of atherosclerosis. This is an arterial disorder involving the intimae of medium- or large-sized arteries, including the aortic, carotid, coronary, and cerebral arteries. Atherosclerotic lesions or plaques contain a complex tissue matrix, including collagen, elastin, proteoglycans, and extracellular and intracellular lipids with foamy macrophages and smooth muscle cells. In addition, inflammatory cellular components (e.g., T lymphocytes, macrophages, and some basophiles) can also be found in these plaques. Efforts are being made to spectroscopically analyze blood vessel walls in vivo using infrared wavelengths to identify and assess the compositions of atherosclerotic lesions.  
       SUMMARY OF THE INVENTION  
       [0005]     The tunable light sources required for these applications ideally have a specific set of operating parameters that distinguish them from functionally similar devices used in other applications. For example, most semiconductor-based lasers naturally have short optical cavities. The laser chips themselves are usually less than 1 millimeter long. Short cavities advantageously, for most applications, result in narrow, spectrally-pure laser signals since only one longitudinal mode oscillates at any moment of operation. In contrast, in spectroscopic applications such as for detection of atherosclerotic lesions, the spectral features of interest are relatively broad. Thus, a narrow linewidth is not a necessity. Moreover, the scan speed must be relatively fast, especially for in vivo measurements, in order to reduce the occurrence of motion induced artifacts.  
         [0006]     Another requirement for spectroscopic tunable laser sources is power stability across the scan. The detector reports the level of reflected light in order to resolve the spectrum. The level of reflected light is dependent upon, in part, the level of incident light. Longitudinal mode hopping, however, is a characteristic of lasers, and especially tunable lasers, that can affect instantaneous amount of light generated by the laser as it scans.  
         [0007]     A laser operates by the establishment of a standing wave within the optical cavity. In a fixed length cavity, only a discrete set of standing waves can be established. This phenomenon is characterized by the cavity&#39;s mode spacing, which is c/(2 L), where c is the speed of light in a vacuum and L is the cavity&#39;s optical path length, taking into account the index of refraction. Hopping from one cavity mode to the next causes output power fluctuation because the modes experience slightly different gain in the cavity, which affects the laser&#39;s instantaneous output power.  
         [0008]     The present invention is directed to a tunable laser source having stable output power during wavelength scanning, and specifically a tunable source that is designed for a spectroscopic catheter system. When compared tunable sources for other applications, the inventive source has an overmoded laser cavity. That is, the longitudinal mode spacing is very close, allowing multiple modes to resonant simultaneously. As a result, as the source tunes over its scan band, changes in how the optical power is distributed in the lasing modes does not lead to any material change in the source output power, because the large number of lasing modes in the cavity&#39;s gain bandwidth tends to minimize the impact of changes in power in any individual mode. As a result, output power fluctuations due to mode-hopping are mitigated as the laser is scanned. There will still be power fluctuations from mode-beating, but these are high-frequency.  
         [0009]     In general, according to one aspect, the invention features a tunable laser source having stable output power during wavelength scanning. The source comprises a laser cavity that includes a wavelength selector for scanning a passband over a scan band and a laser gain chip, providing gain to longitudinal modes of the laser cavity. The wavelength selector allows net gain to longitudinal modes within a certain gain bandwidth determined by the wavelength selector&#39;s passband. According to the invention, the laser cavity is characterized by a cavity longitudinal mode spacing that is more than two times smaller than the gain bandwidth. As a result, multiple longitudinal modes lase simultaneously, thereby improving power stability during scanning.  
         [0010]     Exemplary scan bands for the detection of atherosclerotic lesions include 1100 to 1450 nanometers (nm) generally, or 1100 nm to 1350 nm, 1150 nm to 1250 nm, 1175 nm to 1280 nm, and 1190 nm to 1250 nm, more specifically.  
         [0011]     In the current embodiment, the wavelength selector comprises a bulk diffraction grating, although acousto-optic filters and Bragg gratings can be used in other configurations.  
         [0012]     In the preferred embodiment, the laser cavity further comprises an optical fiber pigtail coupling the laser gain chip and the wavelength selector. This improves manufacturability and also decreases the source&#39;s sensitivity to changes in ambient air pressure, such as with altitude.  
         [0013]     An output coupler for coupling laser light out of the laser cavity is preferably provided to supply the light to a catheter, which is inserted into a patient.  
         [0014]     The laser gain chip preferably comprises a semiconductor optical amplifier, such as a reflective semiconductor optical amplifier.  
         [0015]     In order to ensure that multiple longitudinal modes are lasing over the scan, the laser cavity is preferably made long. In the current embodiment, the cavity is greater than 10 centimeters, and preferable greater than 50 centimeters. This yields an overmoded cavity in which the modes have a spacing of less than 15 Gigahertz (GHz), and preferable less than 1.5 GHz. This coupled with a wide gain bandwidth ensures that multiple modes lase simultaneously. Specifically, the gain bandwidth is greater than 10 GHz, and preferably greater than 50 GHz.  
         [0016]     Two gain chips can be used to increase power or the spectral width of the scan band. The chip or chips are preferably contained within one or more pigtailed hermetic packages, for ease of manufacturing.  
         [0017]     In general, according to another aspect, the invention features a spectroscopic catheter system, which comprises a catheter for insertion into a patient to transmit light to the patient and a tunable laser source. According to the invention, the source has a laser cavity that includes a wavelength selector for scanning a passband over a scan band. A laser gain chip provides gain to modes of the laser cavity within a gain bandwidth provided by the passband. An output coupler couples laser light from laser cavity into the catheter. At least one detector is provided for detecting light returning from the patient. The laser cavity is characterized by a cavity mode spacing that is more than two times smaller than the gain bandwidth.  
         [0018]     In the current application, the catheter is inserted into a lumen of the patient such as a blood vessel and advanced to the patient&#39;s heart.  
         [0019]     In general according to another aspect, the invention can also be characterized as a method for providing tunable frequency light to a patient. The method comprises inserting a catheter into a patient, generating light with a tunable laser, tuning a frequency of the light across a scan band, and detecting light returning from the patient to determine a spectral response of tissue within the patient over the scan band. The length of a laser cavity of the tunable laser is selected so that more than two longitudinal modes of the laser cavity are lasing at all times during the step of tuning the frequency of the light across the scan band.  
         [0020]     The above and other features of the invention including various novel details of construction and combinations of parts, and other advantages, will now be more particularly described with reference to the accompanying drawings and pointed out in the claims. It will be understood that the particular method and device embodying the invention are shown by way of illustration and not as a limitation of the invention. The principles and features of this invention may be employed in various and numerous embodiments without departing from the scope of the invention.  
     
    
     BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS  
       [0021]     In the accompanying drawings, reference characters refer to the same parts throughout the different views. The drawings are not necessarily to scale; emphasis has instead been placed upon illustrating the principles of the invention. Of the drawings:  
         [0022]      FIG. 1A  is a schematic block diagram illustrating the spectroscopic catheter system for the tunable laser source of the present invention;  
         [0023]      FIG. 1B  is a cross-sectional view of the catheter head positioned for performing spectroscopic analysis on a target region of a blood vessel;  
         [0024]      FIG. 2  is a schematic block diagram of a tunable laser source, according to the present invention;  
         [0025]      FIG. 3  is a plot of gain (arbitrary units) as a function of wavelength (nanometers) over the scan band for the inventive laser source;  
         [0026]      FIG. 4  is a plot of output power (arbitrary units) as a function of wavelength over the scan band for a conventional source and the inventive source. 
     
    
     DETAILED DESCRIPTION OF THE PREFERRED EMBODIMENTS  
       [0027]      FIG. 1A  shows a spectroscopic catheter system  50  to which the tunable laser source  100 , of the present invention, is applicable.  
         [0028]     Specifically, the catheter system  50  comprises a catheter  56  that includes an optical fiber or optical fiber bundle. The catheter  56  is typically inserted into the patient  2  via a peripheral vessel, such as the femoral artery  10 . The catheter head  58  is then moved to a desired target area, such as a coronary artery  18  of the heart  16  or the carotid artery  14 . In the example, this is achieved by moving the catheter head  58  up through the aorta  12 .  
         [0029]     When at the desired site, near infrared radiation (NIR) is generated by a laser source  100  and tuned over a scan band covering the spectral band of interest. It is coupled into the optical fiber of the catheter  56  to be transmitted to the catheter head  58 .  
         [0030]     In more detail, with reference to  FIG. 1B , the tunable optical signal  102  for the optical fiber of the catheter  56  is directed by a fold mirror  62 , for example, to exit from the catheter head  58  and impinge on the target area  22  of the artery wall  24 . The catheter head  58  then collects reflected and scattered radiation from the target area  22 .  
         [0031]     Returning to  FIG. 1A , the reflected light is transmitted back down the optical fibers of the catheter  56  to a splitter or circulator  54  or in separate optical fibers. This provides the returning radiation to a detector system  52 , which can comprise one or multiple detectors.  
         [0032]     The controller  60  monitors the response of the detector system  52 , while controlling the tunable laser system  100  in order to probe the near infrared spectral response of the target area  22 . The controller  60  with a power and wavelength detector subsystem  105  monitors the tunable laser system  100 . This enables the controller  60  to track both the wavelength and power output of the tunable laser system  100 .  
         [0033]      FIG. 2  shows the general configuration of a tunable laser system  100 , which has been constructed according to the principles of the present invention.  
         [0034]     Specifically, it comprises at least one semiconductor opto-electronic module  110 . In embodiments where wider tuning ranges or more power are required, multiple modules are used, such as two to eight or more, depending on the spectral range of interest and the total required power.  
         [0035]     The module  110  comprises a semiconductor chip  116 . In the preferred implementation, the chip  116  is a semiconductor optical amplifier chip, and specifically a reflective SOA. The chip&#39;s back facet has a highly reflective (HR) coating  122 . The front facet has an anti-reflective (AR) coating  120 . The chip&#39;s gain waveguide  117  acts as broadband optical energy source.  
         [0036]     Light exiting from the front facet  120  of the chip  117  is coupled into a pigtail  114 . Preferably, the pigtail  114  is single mode fiber that extends through a fiber feed-through in a hermetic package  112  of the module  110 . This package  112  can be dual inline (DIP) or butterfly package depending on the implementation. In either case, the use of conventional hermetically packaged chips reduces the overall cost of the source  100 .  
         [0037]     In still other embodiments, standard, a double pigtailed SOA module can be used. In this case, back reflector feedback is preferably provided with a fiber Bragg gratings formed in one of the pigtails or by flat cleaving the pigtail and then HR coating the fiber facet.  
         [0038]     The fiber pigtail  114  is preferably long to thereby create a long laser cavity. In the preferred embodiment, the optical length of the laser cavity is greater than 10 centimeters, and preferably it is longer than 50 centimeters. In some examples it has an optical length of greater than 1 meter.  
         [0039]     This long cavity has the effect of creating a small cavity mode spacing of less than about 15 Gigahertz and even less than 1.5 Gigahertz. As a result, the laser cavity has greatly reduced ability to discriminate between longitudinal modes.  
         [0040]     When the optical fiber is used as a waveguide for defining the cavity, the actual physical length of the cavity is less than the optical length since the index of refraction of the fiber  114  is greater than air. For example, typical single mode fiber has an index of refraction of about 1.4. Thus, if the optical length is 1 meter, then only about 70 centimeters of fiber is required.  
         [0041]     An output coupler  130  receives the distal end of the pigtail  114  from the semiconductor modules  110 . This output coupler  130  provides an output port for the laser cavity and specifically the output optical signal  102  that is coupled into the catheter  56 . In the illustrated example, some of the output is used by the power and wavelength detector  105  to provide for feedback control of the tunable laser system  100  by the controller  60 . In one implementation, the output coupler  130  is a three-port tap device.  
         [0042]     Optical energy that is not provided as the output signal  102  is coupled to a frequency selective tunable element  140  via free space transmission using a collimator  142 . In one example, the collimator  142  is a graded index or other type of lens. In the preferred embodiment, the collimator  142  is a cylindrical lens and is used in combination with a collimating focusing lens  141  to improve manufacturing tolerances.  
         [0043]     The frequency selective tunable element  140  provides tunable feedback into the SOA chip  116  of the semiconductor module  110 . In the present implementation, the frequency selected tunable element  140  is a diffraction grating. It is angle tuned under the control of the controller  60  to thereby modulate or change the feedback to the module  110  and thus control the wavelength of the output signal  102 .  
         [0044]     In a current implementation, the angle of the grating  140  is controlled using a resonant galvanometer. It preferably is tuned to scan the spectrum relatively quickly, in preferably less than 50 mlliseconds (msec) to remove motion artifacts do to the beating of the heart. Presently, the spectrum is scanned in less than 10 msec or preferably 5 msec or less.  
         [0045]     In other embodiments, other types of frequency selective tunable elements are used. For example, acousto-optic filters and Bragg gratings can be used in place of the diffraction grating.  
         [0046]     The presently proposed configuration incorporates a 600 line/millimeter (mm) diffraction grating, which is 12×12×6 mm in size (Optometrics, LLC, Part No. 3-4669).  
         [0047]      FIG. 3  is a plot of gain as a function of wavelength over the scan band  320 . Specifically, angle tuning the grating  140  has the effect of tuning a passband  310  over the scan band  320 . The shape and more relevantly the spectral width of the passband  310  is a function of the resolution of the grating  140  in combination with the numerical aperture of the collimator  142  and any other aperturing between the fiber  114  and the grating  140 . The passband characterizes the effective wavelength selectivity of the collimator/grating system.  
         [0048]     In the present embodiment, the collimator/grating system is selected to have a relatively wide bandwidth. Specifically, the width of the passband that is above the lasing threshold  312 , thus defining the gain bandwidth  314 , is greater than 10 Gigahertz (GHz). Preferably, the gain bandwidth is greater than 50 GHz, and can be as large as 100 to 200 GHz, or more.  
         [0049]     This wide band gain region results in a relatively wide band laser output signal  102 . For some applications, this wide band, spectrally impure signal would be problematic. In the present application, the spectral features are also relatively wide and diffuse. Thus, the system still has the required spectral resolution for this application.  
         [0050]     The wide gain bandwidth extends to cover multiple cavity modes  330 . The modes will lase simultaneously if the gain medium is purely non-homogenously broadened. Thus, multiple cavity modes resonate since the cavity mode spacing  332  is smaller than the gain bandwidth  314 . Specifically, the gain bandwidth is more than two times the cavity mode spacing. In the preferred embodiment, the combination of the cavity mode spacing, i.e., laser cavity length, and the gain bandwidth are such that 10 or more longitudinal modes will lase simultaneously.  
         [0051]      FIG. 4  is a plot of output power and a function of wavelength across the scan band  320 . Data Set  1   410  was taken from a conventional short cavity tunable laser. The oscillations in output power result from mode hopping. The gain bandwidth is thus on the order of the cavity mode spacing so that as the gain bandwidth is spectrally tuned over the cavity modes, different modes lase and see very different effective gain in the laser cavity. Data set  2   412  is derived from a longer cavity tunable laser in which the cavity is long enough so that more than a few modes are lasing continuously across the scan band. Mode hop induced power fluctuations are greatly reduced. Finally data set  3  was generated from a still longer cavity laser. Here the gain bandwidth encompasses ten or more modes. Mode-hoping induced power fluctuations are almost entirely removed.  
         [0052]     While this invention has been particularly shown and described with references to preferred embodiments thereof, it will be understood by those skilled in the art that various changes in form and details may be made therein without departing from the scope of the invention encompassed by the appended claims.