Time resolved speckle contrast optical spectroscopy at quasi-null source-detector separation for non-invasive measurement of microvascular blood flow

Time (or path length) resolved speckle contrast optical spectroscopy (TD-SCOS) at quasi-null (2.85 mm) source-detector separation was developed and demonstrated. The method was illustrated by in vivo studies on the forearm muscle of an adult subject. The results have shown that selecting longer phot...

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Published inBiomedical optics express Vol. 12; no. 3; pp. 1499 - 1511
Main Authors Pagliazzi, Marco, Colombo, Lorenzo, Vidal-Rosas, Ernesto E., Dragojević, Tanja, Parfentyeva, Veronika, Culver, Joseph P., Konugolu Venkata Sekar, Sanathana, Di Sieno, Laura, Contini, Davide, Torricelli, Alessandro, Pifferi, Antonio, Dalla Mora, Alberto, Durduran, Turgut
Format Journal Article
LanguageEnglish
Published United States Optical Society of America 01.03.2021
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Summary:Time (or path length) resolved speckle contrast optical spectroscopy (TD-SCOS) at quasi-null (2.85 mm) source-detector separation was developed and demonstrated. The method was illustrated by in vivo studies on the forearm muscle of an adult subject. The results have shown that selecting longer photon path lengths results in higher hyperemic blood flow change and a faster return to baseline by a factor of two after arterial cuff occlusion when compared to SCOS without time resolution. This indicates higher sensitivity to the deeper muscle tissue. In the long run, this approach may allow the use of simpler and cheaper detector arrays compared to time resolved diffuse correlation spectroscopy that are based on readily available technologies. Hence, TD-SCOS may increase the performance and decrease cost of devices for continuous non-invasive, deep tissue blood flow monitoring.
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ISSN:2156-7085
2156-7085
DOI:10.1364/BOE.418882