| Literature DB >> 22574267 |
Abstract
Thermal Diffusion Flowmetry (TDF) (also called Heat Clearance Method or Thermal Clearance Method) is a longstanding technique for measuring blood flow or blood perfusion in living tissues. Typically, temperature transients and/or gradients are induced in a volume of interest and the temporal and/or spatial temperature variations which follow are measured and used for calculation of the flow. In this work a new method for implementing TDF is studied theoretically and experimentally. The heat deposition which is required for TDF is implemented photothermally (PT) and the measurement of the induced temperature variations is done by photoacoustic (PA) thermometry. Both excitation light beams (the PT and the PA) are produced by directly modulated 830 nm laser diodes and are conveniently delivered to the volume under test by the same optical fiber. The method was tested experimentally using a blood-filled phantom vessel and the results were compared with a theoretical prediction based on the heat and the photoacoustic equations. The fitting of a simplified lumped thermal model to the experimental data yielded estimated values of the blood velocity at different flow rates. By combining additional optical sources at different wavelengths it will be possible to utilize the method for non-invasive simultaneous measurement of blood flow and oxygen saturation using a single fiber probe.Entities:
Keywords: (170.4090) Modulation techniques; (170.5120) Photoacoustic imaging; (300.6260) Spectroscopy, diode lasers; (300.6430) Spectroscopy, photothermal
Year: 2012 PMID: 22574267 PMCID: PMC3345808 DOI: 10.1364/BOE.3.000800
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Biomed Opt Express ISSN: 2156-7085 Impact factor: 3.732
Fig. 1RC circuit description of the lumped model.
Fig. 2The experimental setup.
Fig. 3The spectrum of a PA response with PT modulation at 2Hz.
Fig. 4Simultaneous measurements of temperature and PA response at different PT modulation power: (a) PA amplitude of carrier frequency, normalized by amplitude without PT modulation, vs. the average temperature τDC. Experimental data marked by squares, linear fit in dashed black. (b) The amplitude of 0.1 Hz modulation peak, normalized by the carrier amplitude without PT modulation, vs. τAC.
Fig. 5Normalized PT-PA modulation frequency responses for stationary (blue) and velocities of 1.06 (pink), 2.1 (green), 4.2 (red), 10.6 (black) and 21.2 (gray) mm/s. Solid lines with markers are experimental data. Dotted lines are Lorentzian fits.
Fig. 6Estimated velocity () vs. real velocity: estimation based on the complete lumped model (red circles). Estimation based on a lumped model which ignores thermal conduction (green circles). Estimation based on only 2 PT modulation frequencies: 1 Hz and 15 Hz (blue x). Dotted black line indicates the 45° line. Inset: zoom-in on the range of low velocities.