標題: Functional photoacoustic micro-imaging of rat cerebral hemodynamic response function in single vessels during forepaw electrical stimulation
作者: Liao, Lun-De
Chen, You-Yin
Lin, Chin-Teng
Chang, Jyh-Yeong
Li, Meng-Lin
電機工程學系
Department of Electrical and Computer Engineering
關鍵字: hemodynamic response function;functional imaging;photoacoustic microscopy;electrical stimulation;hemoglobin oxygenation
公開日期: 2012
摘要: The specificity of the hemodynamic response function (HRF) is determined spatially by the vascular architecture and temporally by the evolution of hemodynamic changes. Here, we used functional photoacoustic microscopy (fPAM) to investigate the spatiotemporal evolution of the HRFs of hemoglobin concentration (HbT), cerebral blood volume (CBV) and hemoglobin oxygen saturation (SO2) in single cerebral vessels to rat left-forepaw stimulation. The HRF changes in specific cerebral vessels responding to different stimulation intensities and durations were bilaterally imaged with 36 x 65-mu m spatial resolution. Various electrical stimulations were applied with stimulation intensities at 1, 2, 6 and 10-mA combined with 5-s and 15-s stimulation durations, respectively. Our main findings were as follows: 1) the functional HbT and SO2 increased sub-linearly with increasing stimulus intensities and 2) the results suggested that the CBV changes are more linearly correlated with arterioles than HbT and SO2 within a limited dynamic range of stimulation intensities and duration. The findings in this study indicate that the regulation of hemodynamic changes in single cerebral vessels can be reliable studied by the fPAM technique without the use of contrast agents.
URI: http://hdl.handle.net/11536/16393
http://dx.doi.org/822334
ISBN: 978-0-8194-8866-4
ISSN: 0277-786X
DOI: 822334
期刊: PHOTONS PLUS ULTRASOUND: IMAGING AND SENSING 2012
Volume: 8223
Appears in Collections:Conferences Paper


Files in This Item:

  1. 000305073300086.pdf

If it is a zip file, please download the file and unzip it, then open index.html in a browser to view the full text content.