• DocumentCode
    3784345
  • Title

    Technical foundations for noninvasive assessment of changes in the width of the subarachnoid space with near-infrared transillumination-backscattering sounding (NIR-TBSS)

  • Author

    A.F. Frydrychowski;W. Guminski;M. Rojewski;J. Kaczmarek;W. Juzwa

  • Author_Institution
    Dept. of Physiol., Med. Univ. of Gdansk, Poland
  • Volume
    49
  • Issue
    8
  • fYear
    2002
  • Firstpage
    887
  • Lastpage
    904
  • Abstract
    This paper presents technical foundations for a new technique of near-infrared transillumination-backscattering sounding, which is designed to enable noninvasive detection and monitoring of changes in the width of the subarachnoid space (SAS) and magnitude of cerebrovascular pulsation in humans. The key novelty of the technique is elimination of influence of blood flow in the scalp on the signals received from two infrared sensors-proximal and distal. A dedicated digital algorithm is used to estimate on line the ratio of the powers of received signals, referred to as two-sensor distal-to-proximal received power quotient, TQ (t). The propagation duct for NIR radiation reaching the distal sensor is the SAS filled with translucent cerebrospinal fluid. Information on slow fluctuations of the average width of the SAS is contained in the slow-variable part of the TQ (t), called the subcardiac component, and in TQ itself. Variations in frequency and magnitude of faster oscillations of the width of that space around the baseline value, dependent on cerebrovascular pulsation, are reflected in instantaneous frequency and envelope of the fast-variable component. Frequency and magnitude of the cerebrovascular pulsation depend on the action of the heart, so this fast-variable component is referred to as the cardiac component.
  • Keywords
    "Synthetic aperture sonar","Frequency","Monitoring","Humans","Blood flow","Scalp","Infrared sensors","Ducts","Fluctuations","Heart"
  • Journal_Title
    IEEE Transactions on Biomedical Engineering
  • Publisher
    ieee
  • ISSN
    0018-9294
  • Type

    jour

  • DOI
    10.1109/TBME.2002.800786
  • Filename
    1019453