Blood oxyhemoglobin saturation measurements by blue-green spectral shift
Previous work describing a resilient method for measuring oxyhemoglobin saturation using the blue-green spectral shift was performed using cell free hemoglobin solutions. Hemoglobin solution and whole...
Interstitial Doppler optical coherence tomography monitors microvascular changes during photodynamic therapy in a Dunning prostate model under varying treatment conditions
We measure the tumor vascular response to varying irradiance rates during photodynamic therapy (PDT) in a Dunning rat prostate model with interstitial Doppler optical coherence tomography (IS-DOCT). R...
Impact of simulated light scatter on the quantitative, noninvasive assessment of retinal arteriolar hemodynamics
J. Biomed. Opt., Vol. 12, 034021 (2007);
doi:10.1117/1.2750292
Published 22 June 2007
ABSTRACT
REFERENCES (25)
Behrooz Azizi, Heike Buehler, Subha T. Venkataraman, and Chris Hudson Retina Research Group, University of Toronto, Department of Ophthalmology and Vision Science, Toronto, Ontario M5T 2S8, Canada and University of Waterloo, School of Optometry, Waterloo, Ontario N2L 3G1, Canada
Wedetermine the impact of artificial light scatter on quantitative, noninvasiveassessment of retinal arteriolar hemodynamics. One eye from each of10 healthy young subjects between the ages of 18 and30 (23.6±3.4) is randomly selected. To simulate light scatter, cellscomprising a plastic collar and two plano lenses are filledwith solutions of differing concentration of polystyrene microspheres (Polysciences Inc.,USA). We prepare 0.002, 0.004, 0.006, and 0.008% microsphere concentrationsas well as distilled water only. The Canon laser bloodflowmeter (CLBF) is used to noninvasively assess retinal arteriolar bloodflow. After a preliminary screening to confirm subject eligibility, sevenarteriolar blood flow measurements are taken by randomly placing thecells between the instrument objective lens and the subjects' cornea.To achieve a baseline, subjects are first imaged with nocell in place. Both low- and high-intensity CLBF laser settingsare assessed. Our light scatter model results in an artifactualincrease of retinal arteriolar diameter (p<0.0001) and thereby increased retinalblood flow (p<0.0001). The 0.006 and 0.008% microsphere concentrations producesignificantly higher diameter and flow values than baseline. Centerline bloodvelocity, however, is not affected by light scatter. Retinal arteriolardiameter values are significantly less with the high-intensity laser thanwith the low-intensity laser (p=0.0007). Densitometry assessment of vessel diameteris increasingly impacted as the magnitude of artificial light scatterincreases; this effect can be partially negated by increasing laserintensity. A cataract is an inevitable consequence of aging and,therefore, care must be exercised in the interpretation of studiesof retinal vessel diameter that use similar densitometry techniques.