利用声光漫射相关光谱定量深度选择测量流量(会议报告)

Mitchell B. Robinson, S. Carp, D. Boas, M. Franceschini
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引用次数: 0

摘要

漫射相关光谱(DCS)是一种新兴的技术,可以定量估计组织中的血流。通过监测光斑强度时间过程的自相关性,可以确定散射粒子(主要是生物组织微血管中的红细胞)的运动信息。散斑波动是由于散射体沿着光子从源到探测器的整个路径长度运动造成的,这使得运动位置的确定成为一项困难的任务。采用多距离和层析成像方法来测量不同源检测器分离下的去相关时间,这有助于将组织中浅层血流与深层血流分开。时域DCS (TD-DCS)是一种仅考虑晚到达光子而提高深度灵敏度的方法。当需要对大脑进行血流测量时,深度分辨的血流定量尤为重要,因为头皮的浅层血流是已知的皮层信号的污染物。最近其他研究小组的研究表明,超声波标记光是区分不同深度的水流的有效方法在这里,我们利用超声脉冲来调制粒子在特定深度的运动,这取决于超声脉冲的飞行时间。通过分析脉冲后不同延迟期散斑强度的自相关性,可以确定流量的定量、深度特定信息。引用:1。Tsalach等人。深度选择声光流量测量。生物医学。光学学报,36(4):481 - 481(2015)。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Quantitative depth selective measurements of flow using acousto-optic diffuse correlation spectroscopy (Conference Presentation)
Diffuse correlation spectroscopy (DCS) is an emerging technology that allows for the quantitative estimation of blood flow in tissue. By monitoring the autocorrelation of the time course of light speckle intensity, information about the motion of scattering particles, mostly red blood cells in the microvasculature of biological tissues, can be determined. The speckle fluctuations are due to motion of scatters along the entire path length of the photon from the source to the detector, which makes the determination of the location of the motion a difficult task. Multi-distance and tomographic methods have been employed to measure decorrelation times at different source detector separations, which helps to separate superficial blood flow from blood flow deeper in the tissue. DCS in the time-domain (TD-DCS) is being evaluated as a method to increase depth sensitivity by considering only the late arriving photons. Depth resolved quantification of blood flow is especially important when blood flow measurements of the brain are desired, as the superficial blood flow of the scalp is a known contaminant to the cortical signal. Recent demonstrations by other groups have shown the utility of ultrasound tagging of light to be an effective method to discriminate flow at different depths.1 Here we utilize ultrasound pulses to modulate the motion of particles at specific depths, which is dependent upon the time-of-flight of the ultrasound pulse. By analyzing the autocorrelation of the speckle intensity at different delay periods after the pulse, quantitative, depth specific information about the flow can be determined. References: 1. Tsalach, A. et al. Depth selective acousto-optic flow measurement. Biomed. Opt. Express 6, 4871–86 (2015).
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