https://www.selleckchem.com/products/gsk2334470.html maintain than the opto-acoustic geometry of conventional PA microscopy techniques. This results in a system capable of high resolution and sensitivity, imaging at real-time rates. The authors believe this work represents a vital step towards a clinical high-resolution reflection-mode video-rate PA imaging system. In summary, we present a method that has a small computational overhead for image rendering, resulting in a live display capable of real-time frame rates. We also report the first 3D imaging with a non-contact label-free reflection-mode PA technique. The all-optical confocal geometry required by PARS is significantly easier to implement and maintain than the opto-acoustic geometry of conventional PA microscopy techniques. This results in a system capable of high resolution and sensitivity, imaging at real-time rates. The authors believe this work represents a vital step towards a clinical high-resolution reflection-mode video-rate PA imaging system. Optical fiber probe spectroscopy can characterize the blood content, hemoglobin oxygen saturation, water content, and scattering properties of a tissue. A narrow probe using closely spaced fibers can access and characterize a local tissue site, but analysis requires the proper light transport theory. Monte Carlo simulations of photon transport specified the response of a two-fiber probe as a function of optical properties in a homogeneous tissue. The simulations used the dimensions of a commercial fiber probe (400-micron-diameter fibers separated by 80-microns of cladding) to calculate the response to a range of 20 absorption and 20 reduced scattering values. The 400 simulations yielded an analysis grid (lookup table) to interpolate the probe response to any given pair of absorption and scattering properties. The probe in contact with tissue is not sensitive to low absorption but sensitive to scattering, as occurs for red to near-infrared spectra. The probe is