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Imaging Cerebral Blood Vessels Using Near-Infrared Optical Tomography: A Simulation Study

Authors :
Scholkmann, Felix
LaManna, Joseph
Wolf, Ursula
Scholkmann, F ( Felix )
LaManna, J ( Joseph )
Wolf, U ( Ursula )
Yacheur, D
Ackermann, Meret
Li, T
Kalyanov, Alexander; https://orcid.org/0000-0002-0246-6942
Russomanno, Emanuele
Mata, Aldo Di Costanzo
Wolf, Martin; https://orcid.org/0000-0001-7525-891X
Jiang, Jingjing; https://orcid.org/0000-0002-3983-7647
Scholkmann, Felix
LaManna, Joseph
Wolf, Ursula
Scholkmann, F ( Felix )
LaManna, J ( Joseph )
Wolf, U ( Ursula )
Yacheur, D
Ackermann, Meret
Li, T
Kalyanov, Alexander; https://orcid.org/0000-0002-0246-6942
Russomanno, Emanuele
Mata, Aldo Di Costanzo
Wolf, Martin; https://orcid.org/0000-0001-7525-891X
Jiang, Jingjing; https://orcid.org/0000-0002-3983-7647
Source :
Yacheur, D; Ackermann, Meret; Li, T; Kalyanov, Alexander; Russomanno, Emanuele; Mata, Aldo Di Costanzo; Wolf, Martin; Jiang, Jingjing (2023). Imaging Cerebral Blood Vessels Using Near-Infrared Optical Tomography: A Simulation Study. In: Scholkmann, Felix; LaManna, Joseph; Wolf, Ursula. Oxygen Transport to Tissue XLIV. Cham: Springer, 203-207.
Publication Year :
2023

Abstract

Cerebral veins have received increasing attention due to their importance in preoperational planning and the brain oxygenation measurement. There are different modalities to image those vessels, such as magnetic resonance angiography (MRA) and recently, contrast-enhanced (CE) 3D gradient-echo sequences. However, the current techniques have certain disadvantages, i.e., the long examination time, the requirement of contrast agents or inability to measure oxygenation. Near-infrared optical tomography (NIROT) is emerging as a viable new biomedical imaging modality that employs near infrared light (650-950 nm) to image biological tissue. It was proven to easily penetrate the skull and therefore enables the brain vessels to be assessed. NIROT utilizes safe non-ionizing radiation and can be applied in e.g., early detection of neonatal brain injury and ischemic strokes. The aim is to develop non-invasive label-free dynamic time domain (TD) NIROT to image the brain vessels. A simulation study was performed with the software (NIRFAST) which models light propagation in tissue with the finite element method (FEM). Both a simple shape mesh and a real head mesh including all the segmented vessels from MRI images were simulated using both FEM and a hybrid FEM-U-Net network, we were able to visualize the superficial vessels with NIROT with a Root Mean Square Error (RMSE) lower than 0.079.

Details

Database :
OAIster
Journal :
Yacheur, D; Ackermann, Meret; Li, T; Kalyanov, Alexander; Russomanno, Emanuele; Mata, Aldo Di Costanzo; Wolf, Martin; Jiang, Jingjing (2023). Imaging Cerebral Blood Vessels Using Near-Infrared Optical Tomography: A Simulation Study. In: Scholkmann, Felix; LaManna, Joseph; Wolf, Ursula. Oxygen Transport to Tissue XLIV. Cham: Springer, 203-207.
Notes :
application/pdf, English, English
Publication Type :
Electronic Resource
Accession number :
edsoai.on1417817642
Document Type :
Electronic Resource