Hannah Van Lankveld, Anh Q Mai, Lew Lim, Nazanin Hosseinkhah, Paolo Cassano, J Jean Chen
{"title":"基于模拟的经颅和鼻内人脑光生物调节剂量测定:波长、功率密度和肤色的作用。","authors":"Hannah Van Lankveld, Anh Q Mai, Lew Lim, Nazanin Hosseinkhah, Paolo Cassano, J Jean Chen","doi":"10.1364/BOE.567345","DOIUrl":null,"url":null,"abstract":"<p><p>Photobiomodulation (PBM) using near-infrared (NIR) light is a novel neuromodulation technique. However, despite the many in vivo studies, the stimulation protocols for PBM vary across studies, and the current understanding of the physiological effects of PBM, as well as the dose dependence, is limited. Specifically, although NIR light can be absorbed by melanin in the skin, the understanding of how skin tones compare and how their influence interacts with other dose parameters remains limited. This study investigates the effect of melanin, optical power density, and wavelength on light penetration and energy accumulation via forehead and intranasal PBM. We use Monte Carlo simulations of a single laser source for transcranial (tPBM, forehead position) and intranasal (iPBM, nostril position) irradiation on a healthy human brain model. We investigate wavelengths of 670, 810, and 1064 nm at various power densities in combination with light (\"Caucasian\"), medium (\"Asian\"), and dark (\"African\") skin tone categories as defined in the literature. Our simulations show that a maximum of 15% of the incidental energy for tPBM and 1% for iPBM reaches the cortex from the light source. The rostral dorsal prefrontal cortex and the ventromedial prefrontal cortex accumulate the highest light energy in tPBM and iPBM, respectively, for both wavelengths. Notably, we show that nominally \"Caucasian\" skin allows the highest energy accumulation of all three skin tones. Moreover, the 810 nm wavelength for tPBM and the 1064 nm wavelength for iPBM produced the highest cortical energy accumulation, which was linearly correlated with optical power density, but these variations could be overridden by a difference in skin tone in the tPBM case.The simulations serve as a starting point for enabling hypothesis generation for in vivo PBM investigations. This study is the first to account for skin tone as a tPBM dosing consideration. For the future of PBM research, it is important to evaluate combinations of stimulation parameters (wavelength, optical power density, pulsation frequency, duration, light source) when working to determine an optimal dosage for PBM-based therapy.</p>","PeriodicalId":8969,"journal":{"name":"Biomedical optics express","volume":"16 8","pages":"3295-3314"},"PeriodicalIF":3.2000,"publicationDate":"2025-07-21","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC12339309/pdf/","citationCount":"0","resultStr":"{\"title\":\"Simulation-based dosimetry of transcranial and intranasal photobiomodulation of the human brain: the roles of wavelength, power density, and skin tone.\",\"authors\":\"Hannah Van Lankveld, Anh Q Mai, Lew Lim, Nazanin Hosseinkhah, Paolo Cassano, J Jean Chen\",\"doi\":\"10.1364/BOE.567345\",\"DOIUrl\":null,\"url\":null,\"abstract\":\"<p><p>Photobiomodulation (PBM) using near-infrared (NIR) light is a novel neuromodulation technique. However, despite the many in vivo studies, the stimulation protocols for PBM vary across studies, and the current understanding of the physiological effects of PBM, as well as the dose dependence, is limited. Specifically, although NIR light can be absorbed by melanin in the skin, the understanding of how skin tones compare and how their influence interacts with other dose parameters remains limited. This study investigates the effect of melanin, optical power density, and wavelength on light penetration and energy accumulation via forehead and intranasal PBM. We use Monte Carlo simulations of a single laser source for transcranial (tPBM, forehead position) and intranasal (iPBM, nostril position) irradiation on a healthy human brain model. We investigate wavelengths of 670, 810, and 1064 nm at various power densities in combination with light (\\\"Caucasian\\\"), medium (\\\"Asian\\\"), and dark (\\\"African\\\") skin tone categories as defined in the literature. Our simulations show that a maximum of 15% of the incidental energy for tPBM and 1% for iPBM reaches the cortex from the light source. The rostral dorsal prefrontal cortex and the ventromedial prefrontal cortex accumulate the highest light energy in tPBM and iPBM, respectively, for both wavelengths. Notably, we show that nominally \\\"Caucasian\\\" skin allows the highest energy accumulation of all three skin tones. Moreover, the 810 nm wavelength for tPBM and the 1064 nm wavelength for iPBM produced the highest cortical energy accumulation, which was linearly correlated with optical power density, but these variations could be overridden by a difference in skin tone in the tPBM case.The simulations serve as a starting point for enabling hypothesis generation for in vivo PBM investigations. This study is the first to account for skin tone as a tPBM dosing consideration. 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Simulation-based dosimetry of transcranial and intranasal photobiomodulation of the human brain: the roles of wavelength, power density, and skin tone.
Photobiomodulation (PBM) using near-infrared (NIR) light is a novel neuromodulation technique. However, despite the many in vivo studies, the stimulation protocols for PBM vary across studies, and the current understanding of the physiological effects of PBM, as well as the dose dependence, is limited. Specifically, although NIR light can be absorbed by melanin in the skin, the understanding of how skin tones compare and how their influence interacts with other dose parameters remains limited. This study investigates the effect of melanin, optical power density, and wavelength on light penetration and energy accumulation via forehead and intranasal PBM. We use Monte Carlo simulations of a single laser source for transcranial (tPBM, forehead position) and intranasal (iPBM, nostril position) irradiation on a healthy human brain model. We investigate wavelengths of 670, 810, and 1064 nm at various power densities in combination with light ("Caucasian"), medium ("Asian"), and dark ("African") skin tone categories as defined in the literature. Our simulations show that a maximum of 15% of the incidental energy for tPBM and 1% for iPBM reaches the cortex from the light source. The rostral dorsal prefrontal cortex and the ventromedial prefrontal cortex accumulate the highest light energy in tPBM and iPBM, respectively, for both wavelengths. Notably, we show that nominally "Caucasian" skin allows the highest energy accumulation of all three skin tones. Moreover, the 810 nm wavelength for tPBM and the 1064 nm wavelength for iPBM produced the highest cortical energy accumulation, which was linearly correlated with optical power density, but these variations could be overridden by a difference in skin tone in the tPBM case.The simulations serve as a starting point for enabling hypothesis generation for in vivo PBM investigations. This study is the first to account for skin tone as a tPBM dosing consideration. For the future of PBM research, it is important to evaluate combinations of stimulation parameters (wavelength, optical power density, pulsation frequency, duration, light source) when working to determine an optimal dosage for PBM-based therapy.
期刊介绍:
The journal''s scope encompasses fundamental research, technology development, biomedical studies and clinical applications. BOEx focuses on the leading edge topics in the field, including:
Tissue optics and spectroscopy
Novel microscopies
Optical coherence tomography
Diffuse and fluorescence tomography
Photoacoustic and multimodal imaging
Molecular imaging and therapies
Nanophotonic biosensing
Optical biophysics/photobiology
Microfluidic optical devices
Vision research.