Literature DB >> 25360359

Coherent hemodynamics spectroscopy in a single step.

Jana M Kainerstorfer1, Angelo Sassaroli1, Sergio Fantini1.   

Abstract

Coherent Hemodynamics Spectroscopy (CHS) is a technique based on inducing cerebral hemodynamic oscillations at multiple frequencies, measuring them with near-infrared spectroscopy (NIRS), and analyzing them with a hemodynamic model to obtain physiological information such as blood transit times in the microvasculature and the autoregulation cutoff frequency. We have previously demonstrated that such oscillations can be induced one frequency at a time. Here we demonstrate that CHS can be performed by a single inflation of two pneumatic thigh cuffs (duration: 2 min; pressure: 200 mmHg), whose sudden release produces a step response in systemic arterial blood pressure that lasts for ~20 s and induces cerebral hemodynamics that contain all the frequency information necessary for CHS. Following a validation study on simulated data, we performed measurements on human subjects with this new method based on a single occlusion/release of the thigh cuffs and with the previous method based on sequential sets of cyclic inflation/deflation one frequency at a time, and demonstrated that the two methods yield the same CHS spectra and the same physiological parameters (within measurement errors). The advantages of the new method presented here are that CHS spectra cover the entire bandwidth of the induced hemodynamic response, they are measured over ~20 s thus better satisfying the requirement of time invariance of physiological conditions, and they can be measured every ~2.5 min thus achieving finer temporal sampling in monitoring applications.

Entities:  

Keywords:  (170.0170) Medical optics and biotechnology; (170.4580) Optical diagnostics for medicine; (170.6510) Spectroscopy, tissue diagnostics

Year:  2014        PMID: 25360359      PMCID: PMC4206311          DOI: 10.1364/BOE.5.003403

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Biomed Opt Express        ISSN: 2156-7085            Impact factor:   3.732


  32 in total

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  5 in total

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2.  Cerebral blood flow and autoregulation: current measurement techniques and prospects for noninvasive optical methods.

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4.  Optical oximetry of volume-oscillating vascular compartments: contributions from oscillatory blood flow.

Authors:  Jana M Kainerstorfer; Angelo Sassaroli; Sergio Fantini
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5.  Frequency-domain analysis of fNIRS fluctuations induced by rhythmic mental arithmetic.

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