Intraoperative Laser Speckle Contrast Imaging For Real-Time Visualization of Cerebral Blood Flow in Cerebrovascular Surgery: Results From Pre-Clinical Studies
Autor: | M. Jason Brooke, Alessandro Olivi, Jaepyeong Cha, Betty Tyler, Francesco Volpin, Antonella Mangraviti, Abhishek Rege, Judy Huang, Samantha I. Cunningham, Henry Brem, Karan Raje |
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Rok vydání: | 2020 |
Předmět: |
Time Factors
lcsh:Medicine Femoral artery 01 natural sciences Article Optical imaging 010309 optics 03 medical and health sciences Speckle pattern Medical research 0302 clinical medicine Clipping (photography) Monitoring Intraoperative medicine.artery 0103 physical sciences Animals Medicine lcsh:Science Multidisciplinary business.industry Lasers lcsh:R Continuous monitoring Molecular Imaging Rats Cerebral blood flow Cerebrovascular Circulation lcsh:Q Molecular imaging business Perfusion Cerebrovascular surgery 030217 neurology & neurosurgery Biomedical engineering |
Zdroj: | Scientific Reports Scientific Reports, Vol 10, Iss 1, Pp 1-13 (2020) |
ISSN: | 2045-2322 |
Popis: | Cerebrovascular surgery can benefit from an intraoperative system that conducts continuous monitoring of cerebral blood flow (CBF). Such a system must be handy, non-invasive, and directly integrated into the surgical workflow. None of the currently available techniques, considered alone, meets all these criteria. Here, we introduce the SurgeON™ system: a newly developed non-invasive modular tool which transmits high-resolution Laser Speckle Contrast Imaging (LSCI) directly onto the eyepiece of the surgical microscope. In preclinical rodent and rabbit models, we show that this system enabled the detection of acute perfusion changes as well as the recording of temporal response patterns and degrees of flow changes in various microvascular settings, such as middle cerebral artery occlusion, femoral artery clipping, and complete or incomplete cortical vessel cautery. During these procedures, a real-time visualization of vasculature and CBF was available in high spatial resolution through the eyepiece as a direct overlay on the live morphological view of the surgical field. Upon comparison with indocyanine green angiography videoangiography (ICG-VA) imaging, also operable via SurgeON, we found that direct-LSCI can produce greater information than ICG-VA and that continuous display of data is advantageous for performing immediate LSCI-guided adjustments in real time. |
Databáze: | OpenAIRE |
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