Title :
In vivo Doppler shift measurements using multimode fiber-optic catheters
Author :
Tjin, Swee Chuan ; Ng, Seng Lee ; Soo, Kian Thiam
Author_Institution :
Sch. of Electr. & Electron. Eng., Nanyang Technol. Inst., Singapore
Abstract :
A new fiber-optic catheter for in vivo blood-flow measurements has been developed. The catheter is designed to measure blood flow in both the forward (toward the catheter tip) and reverse (away from the catheter tip) flow directions. It consists of two multimode optical fibers with core diameter of 50 μm and cladding diameter of 125 μm. One fiber transmits the laser beam into blood and the other receives the backscattered light from the erythrocytes within the probe volume. In the flow experiment, it was found that the flow within the boundary layer is indeed laminar and, hence, the relationship between the Doppler shift frequencies and the flow velocities is linear, thereby making the linear calibration possible for predicting the free stream flow velocity. Plots of the maximum shift frequency (frequency at which the Doppler spectrum disappeared into the noise spectrum) against the flow velocities are found to be more linear in both the forward and reverse flow directions than that of the dominant shift frequency (frequency with the highest amplitude). These results were reaffirmed by the numerical flow simulation along the catheter side wall.
Keywords :
Doppler shift; biomedical equipment; blood flow measurement; fibre optic sensors; laser applications in medicine; 125 mum; 50 mum; Doppler spectrum; backscattered light; catheter side wall; cladding diameter; core diameter; dominant shift frequency; fiber-optic catheter; forward flow direction; free stream flow velocity; in vivo Doppler shift measurements; in vivo blood flow measurements; laser beam transmission; linear calibration; maximum shift frequency; noise spectrum; numerical flow simulation; reverse flow direction; Blood flow; Catheters; Doppler shift; Fiber lasers; Fluid flow measurement; Frequency; In vivo; Laser beams; Optical fibers; Probes; Catheterization; Equipment Design; Fiber Optics; Laser-Doppler Flowmetry;
Journal_Title :
Biomedical Engineering, IEEE Transactions on