학술논문

Quantitative real-time optical imaging of the tissue metabolic rate of oxygen consumption
Document Type
article
Source
Journal of Biomedical Optics. 23(3)
Subject
Engineering
Biomedical Engineering
Bioengineering
Biomedical Imaging
Adult
Equipment Design
Hand
Hemoglobins
Humans
Male
Optical Imaging
Organ Specificity
Oxygen Consumption
Oxyhemoglobins
Phantoms
Imaging
tissue metabolism
tissue optics
scattering
absorption
speckle contrast
Optical Physics
Opthalmology and Optometry
Optics
Ophthalmology and optometry
Biomedical engineering
Atomic
molecular and optical physics
Language
Abstract
The tissue metabolic rate of oxygen consumption (tMRO2) is a clinically relevant marker for a number of pathologies including cancer and arterial occlusive disease. We present and validate a noncontact method for quantitatively mapping tMRO2 over a wide, scalable field of view at 16  frames  /  s. We achieve this by developing a dual-wavelength, near-infrared coherent spatial frequency-domain imaging (cSFDI) system to calculate tissue optical properties (i.e., absorption, μa, and reduced scattering, μs', parameters) as well as the speckle flow index (SFI) at every pixel. Images of tissue oxy- and deoxyhemoglobin concentration (  [  HbO2  ]   and [HHb]) are calculated from optical properties and combined with SFI to calculate tMRO2. We validate the system using a series of yeast-hemoglobin tissue-simulating phantoms and conduct in vivo tests in humans using arterial occlusions that demonstrate sensitivity to tissue metabolic oxygen debt and its repayment. Finally, we image the impact of cyanide exposure and toxicity reversal in an in vivo rabbit model showing clear instances of mitochondrial uncoupling and significantly diminished tMRO2. We conclude that dual-wavelength cSFDI provides rapid, quantitative, wide-field mapping of tMRO2 that can reveal unique spatial and temporal dynamics relevant to tissue pathology and viability.