| Literature DB >> 32923509 |
Paul Shin1,2, Jin-Hui Yoon2,3, Yong Jeong2,3, Wang-Yuhl Oh1,2.
Abstract
Significance: Having a clear understanding of functional hyperemia is crucial for functional brain imaging and neurological disease research. Vasodilation induced by sensory stimulus propagates from the arterioles to the upstream pial arteries in a retrograde fashion. As retrograde vasodilation occurs briefly in the early stage of functional hyperemia, an imaging technique with a high temporal resolution is required for its measurement. Aim: We aimed to present an imaging method to measure stimulus-induced retrograde vasodilation in awake animals. Approach: An imaging method based on optical coherence tomography angiography, which enables a high-speed and label-free vessel diameter measurement, was developed and applied for the investigation.Entities:
Keywords: angiography; awake imaging; functional hyperemia; optical coherence tomography; retrograde vasodilation
Year: 2020 PMID: 32923509 PMCID: PMC7481125 DOI: 10.1117/1.NPh.7.3.030502
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Neurophotonics ISSN: 2329-423X Impact factor: 3.593
Fig. 1(a) Experimental timeline. (b) The imaging setup for awake imaging. (c) Web camera images of an awake mouse acquired during OISI (top row), and OISI images of the mouse cranial window simultaneously acquired with the web camera images showing hemodynamic response induced by the 0.3-s whisker stimulus (bottom row) (Video 1, MP4, 2.3 MB [URL: https://doi.org/10.1117/1.NPh.7.3.030502.1]).
Fig. 2(a) A CCD image of the mouse cranial window. (b) OISI images of the region shown in (a). The black arrow indicates the direction of the propagation. (c) A depth-projected OCT angiogram of the region indicated by the gray square in (a) (0 to from the cortical surface, maximum projection). A magnified view of the region where OCTA-2 was performed is shown (white square). The white arrow indicates the direction of the propagation of total hemoglobin response, which was identified by OISI. (d) Left column: depth-projected OCT angiograms continuously acquired at Y3 and Y6 in (c). The stimulus application is indicated by the gray-shaded area. Right column: the average time courses of stimulus-induced change in vessel diameter measured at Y3 and Y6. The thick and thin lines indicate a time course with and without low-pass filtering, respectively. (e) Two average time courses in (d) are overlapped; low-pass filtering and minimum–maximum normalization were performed for each time course (Video 2, MP4, 2.9 MB [URL: https://doi.org/10.1117/1.NPh.7.3.030502.2]).
Fig. 3(a) A depth-projected OCT angiogram showing a pial artery and its first-order branches shaded in yellow (0 to from the cortical surface, maximum projection). An magnified view of the region where OCTA-2 was performed is indicated by the white square. The horizontal lines indicate the locations where data were acquired. (b) Average time courses of the change in diameter of the pial artery measured at five locations (Y2 to Y6), as indicated in (a). Minimum–maximum normalization was performed for each profile. (c) Scatter plots between , which is the distance between two measurement locations, and , which is the peak-to-peak delay between the time courses in the four mice. Different animals are indicated with different shaped dots. The regression line for each animal is indicated by a thin solid line. The thick solid line indicates the regression fit of all data. (d) The mean propagation speed of vasodilation for all animals. (e) Average time courses of the diameter of four pial arteries from four mice. For each artery, all time courses of vessel diameter used to obtain the data in (c) are plotted. (f) Hemodynamic responses of the pial artery to the stimulus in anesthetized and awake conditions acquired at the same location in the same animal (Video 3, MP4, 1.7 MB [URL: https://doi.org/10.1117/1.NPh.7.3.030502.3]).