1. Alternative intraoperative optical imaging modalities for fluorescence angiography in gastrointestinal surgery: spectral imaging and imaging photoplethysmography.
- Author
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Chalopin C, Pfahl A, Köhler H, Knospe L, Maktabi M, Unger M, Jansen-Winkeln B, Thieme R, Moulla Y, Mehdorn M, Sucher R, Neumuth T, Gockel I, and Melzer A
- Subjects
- Humans, Fluorescein Angiography methods, Photoplethysmography, Coloring Agents, Indocyanine Green, Optical Imaging methods, Digestive System Surgical Procedures
- Abstract
Introduction: Intraoperative near-infrared fluorescence angiography with indocyanine green (ICG-FA) is a well-established modality in gastrointestinal surgery. Its main drawback is the application of a fluorescent agent with possible side effects for patients. The goal of this review paper is the presentation of alternative, non-invasive optical imaging methods and their comparison with ICG-FA., Material and Methods: The principles of ICG-FA, spectral imaging, imaging photoplethysmography (iPPG), and their applications in gastrointestinal surgery are described based on selected published works., Results: The main applications of the three modalities are the evaluation of tissue perfusion, the identification of risk structures, and tissue segmentation or classification. While the ICG-FA images are mainly evaluated visually, leading to subjective interpretations, quantitative physiological parameters and tissue segmentation are provided in spectral imaging and iPPG. The combination of ICG-FA and spectral imaging is a promising method., Conclusions: Non-invasive spectral imaging and iPPG have shown promising results in gastrointestinal surgery. They can overcome the main drawbacks of ICG-FA, i.e. the use of contrast agents, the lack of quantitative analysis, repeatability, and a difficult standardization of the acquisition. Further technical improvements and clinical evaluations are necessary to establish them in daily clinical routine.
- Published
- 2023
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