Publication | Open Access
High speed, wide velocity dynamic range Doppler optical coherence tomography (Part I): System design, signal processing, and performance
207
Citations
10
References
2003
Year
Medical UltrasoundEngineeringAdvanced ImagingPower DopplerCoherenceBiomedical EngineeringDoppler SpectrumSystem DesignOptical SystemsInstrumentationBlood Flow MeasurementRadiologyCardiovascular ImagingHealth SciencesPhotonicsVascular ImageMedical ImagingOphthalmologyVivo Blood FlowUltrasoundHigh SpeedSignal ProcessingOptical ImagingBiomedical ImagingOptical Information ProcessingOptical Coherence TomographyOptical Engineering
Improvements in real-time Doppler optical coherence tomography (DOCT), acquiring up to 32 frames per second at 250 x 512 pixels per image, are reported using signal processing techniques commonly employed in Doppler ultrasound imaging. The ability to measure a wide range of flow velocities, ranging from less than 20 microm/s to more than 10 cm/s, is demonstrated using an 1.3 microm DOCT system with flow phantoms in steady and pulsatile flow conditions. Based on full implementation of a coherent demodulator, four different modes of flow visualization are demonstrated: color Doppler, velocity variance, Doppler spectrum, and power Doppler. The performance of the former two, which are computationally suitable for real-time imaging, are analyzed in detail under various signal-to-noise and frame-rate conditions. The results serve as a guideline for choosing appropriate imaging parameters for detecting in vivo blood flow.
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