DocumentCode
1137473
Title
A laser speckle imaging technique for measuring tissue perfusion
Author
Forrester, Kevin R. ; Tulip, J. ; Leonard, C. ; Stewart, C. ; Bray, Robert C.
Author_Institution
Dept. of Surg., Univ. of Calgary, Alta., Canada
Volume
51
Issue
11
fYear
2004
Firstpage
2074
Lastpage
2084
Abstract
Laser Doppler imaging (LDI) has become a standard method for optical measurement of tissue perfusion, but is limited by low resolution and long measurement times. We have developed an analysis technique based on a laser speckle imaging method that generates rapid, high-resolution perfusion images. We have called it laser speckle perfusion imaging (LSPI). This paper investigates LSPI output and compares it to LDI using blood flow models designed to simulate human skin at various levels of pigmentation. Results show that LSPI parameters can be chosen such that the instrumentation exhibits a similar response to changes in red blood cell concentration (0.1%-5%, 200 μL/min) and velocity (0-800 μL/min, 1% concentration) and, given its higher resolution and quicker response time, could provide a significant advantage over LDI for some applications. Differences were observed in the LDI and LSPI response to tissue optical properties. LDI perfusion values increased with increasing tissue absorption, while LSPI perfusion values showed a slight decrease. This dependence is predictable, owing to the perfusion algorithms specific to each instrument, and, if properly compensated for, should not influence each instrument´s ability to measure relative changes in tissue perfusion.
Keywords
bio-optics; biomedical optical imaging; blood; cellular biophysics; haemorheology; image resolution; laser applications in medicine; medical image processing; physiological models; skin; blood flow; human skin; laser Doppler imaging; laser speckle imaging technique; optical measurement; pigmentation; rapid high-resolution tissue perfusion images; red blood cell concentration; tissue absorption; tissue optical properties; Adaptive optics; Blood flow; High-resolution imaging; Image analysis; Image resolution; Instruments; Laser modes; Measurement standards; Optical imaging; Speckle; Algorithms; Animals; Blood Flow Velocity; Blood Vessels; Equipment Design; Equipment Failure Analysis; Humans; Image Interpretation, Computer-Assisted; Lasers; Skin;
fLanguage
English
Journal_Title
Biomedical Engineering, IEEE Transactions on
Publisher
ieee
ISSN
0018-9294
Type
jour
DOI
10.1109/TBME.2004.834259
Filename
1344210
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