Publication | Open Access
Time-resolved absorption and hemoglobin concentration difference maps: a method to retrieve depth-related information on cerebral hemodynamics.
29
Citations
25
References
2006
Year
HemodynamicsEngineeringAbsorption SpectroscopyBrain MappingBiomedical EngineeringOptical Absorption VariationsCerebral Vascular RegulationBlood FlowDepth-related InformationOptical PropertiesNeurologyTime-resolved AbsorptionBlood Flow MeasurementBiophysicsAbsorption CoefficientNeuroimagingNear-infrared SpectroscopyResin PhantomsBiophotonicsCerebral Blood FlowBrain ImagingOptical ImagingNeurophysiologySpectroscopyPhysiologyBiomedical ImagingNeuroscienceCerebral HemodynamicsMedicine
Time-resolved diffuse optical methods have been applied to detect hemodynamic changes induced by cerebral activity. We describe a near infrared spectroscopic (NIRS) reconstruction free method which allows retrieving depth-related information on absorption variations. Variations in the absorption coefficient of tissues have been computed over the duration of the whole experiment, but also over each temporal step of the time-resolved optical signal, using the microscopic Beer-Lambert law.Finite element simulations show that time-resolved computation of the absorption difference as a function of the propagation time of detected photons is sensitive to the depth profile of optical absorption variations. Differences in deoxyhemoglobin and oxyhemoglobin concentrations can also be calculated from multi-wavelength measurements. Experimental validations of the simulated results have been obtained for resin phantoms. They confirm that time-resolved computation of the absorption differences exhibited completely different behaviours, depending on whether these variations occurred deeply or superficially. The hemodynamic response to a short finger tapping stimulus was measured over the motor cortex and compared to experiments involving Valsalva manoeuvres. Functional maps were also calculated for the hemodynamic response induced by finger tapping movements.
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