Publication | Open Access
Application of Thinned-Skull Cranial Window to Mouse Cerebral Blood Flow Imaging Using Optical Microangiography
54
Citations
31
References
2014
Year
Skull WindowEngineeringDoppler Optical MicroangiographyBiomedical EngineeringCerebral Vascular RegulationNeurovascular DiseaseBlood FlowVascular ImagingIntracranial PressureNeurologyBlood Flow MeasurementVascular ImageOphthalmologyMedical ImagingNeuroimagingVascular BiologyCerebral Blood FlowBiomedical ImagingThinned-skull Cranial WindowMedicinePial Vessels
In vivo imaging of mouse brain vasculature typically requires applying skull window opening techniques: open-skull cranial window or thinned-skull cranial window. We report non-invasive 3D in vivo cerebral blood flow imaging of C57/BL mouse by the use of ultra-high sensitive optical microangiography (UHS-OMAG) and Doppler optical microangiography (DOMAG) techniques to evaluate two cranial window types based on their procedures and ability to visualize surface pial vessel dynamics. Application of the thinned-skull technique is found to be effective in achieving high quality images for pial vessels for short-term imaging, and has advantages over the open-skull technique in available imaging area, surgical efficiency, and cerebral environment preservation. In summary, thinned-skull cranial window serves as a promising tool in studying hemodynamics in pial microvasculature using OMAG or other OCT blood flow imaging modalities.
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