Journal of Biomedical Optics, September/October 2009
J. Biomed. Opt. 14, 050506 (2009) (3 pages)
©2009 Society of Photo-Optical Instrumentation Engineers. All rights reserved.

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Live imaging of rat embryos with Doppler swept-source optical coherence tomography

Irina V. Larina,1
Kenryo Furushima,2
Mary E. Dickinson,1
Richard R. Behringer,2 and
Kirill V. Larin3

1Baylor College of Medicine, Molecular Physiology and Biophysics, One Baylor Plaza, Houston, Texas  77030
2University of Texas, MD Anderson Cancer Center Department of Genetics, 1515 Holcombe Boulevard, Houston, Texas  77030
3University of Houston, Department of Biomedical Engineering, N207 Engineering Building 1, Houston, Texas  77204

(Received: 15 May 2009; revised: 10 August 2009; accepted: 11 August 2009; published online: 1 October 2009)

The rat has long been considered an excellent system to study mammalian embryonic cardiovascular physiology, but has lacked the extensive genetic tools available in the mouse to be able to create single gene mutations. However, the recent establishment of rat embryonic stem cell lines facilitates the generation of new models in the rat embryo to link changes in physiology with altered gene function to define the underlying mechanisms behind congenital cardiovascular birth defects. Along with the ability to create new rat genotypes there is a strong need for tools to analyze phenotypes with high spatial and temporal resolution. Doppler OCT has been previously used for 3-D structural analysis and blood flow imaging in other model species. We use Doppler swept-source OCT for live imaging of early postimplantation rat embryos. Structural imaging is used for 3-D reconstruction of embryo morphology and dynamic imaging of the beating heart and vessels, while Doppler-mode imaging is used to visualize blood flow. We demonstrate that Doppler swept-source OCT can provide essential information about the dynamics of early rat embryos and serve as a basis for a wide range of studies on functional evaluation of rat embryo physiology. ©2009 Society of Photo-Optical Instrumentation Engineers


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