Assessment of optical properties in cerebral ischemic rats by using near infrared spectroscopy

Author(s):  
Wan-Chen Shao ◽  
Chun-Wei Wu ◽  
Chun-Man Yuan ◽  
Jia-Jin Jason Chen
Author(s):  
Sachiko Kessoku ◽  
Katsuhiko Maruo ◽  
Shinpei Okawa ◽  
Kazuto Masamoto ◽  
Yukio Yamada

Various non-invasive glucose monitoring methods using near-infrared spectroscopy have been investigated although no method has been successful so far. Our previous study has proposed a new promising method utilizing numerically generated absorbance spectra instead of the experimentally acquired absorbance spectra. The method suggests that the correct estimation of the optical properties is very important for numerically generating the absorbance spectra. The purpose of this study is to measure the change in the optical properties of the skin with the change in the blood glucose level in vivo. By measuring the reflectances of light incident on the skin surface at two distances from the incident point, the optical properties of the skin can be estimated. The estimation is a kind of the inverse problem based on the simulation of light propagation in the skin. Phantom experiments have verified the method and in vivo experiments are to be performed.


2016 ◽  
Vol 24 (9) ◽  
pp. 9561 ◽  
Author(s):  
Keiji Konagaya ◽  
Tetsuya Inagaki ◽  
Ryunosuke Kitamura ◽  
Satoru Tsuchikawa

2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Roy A. Stillwell ◽  
Vincent J. Kitsmiller ◽  
Alicia Y. Wei ◽  
Alyssa Chong ◽  
Lyla Senn ◽  
...  

Frequency-domain near-infrared spectroscopy (FD-NIRS) provides quantitative noninvasive measurements of tissue optical absorption and scattering, and provides a safe and accurate method for characterizing tissue composition and metabolism. However, the poor scalability and high complexity of most FD-NIRS systems assembled to date have contributed to its limited clinical impact. To address these shortcomings, we present a scalable, digital-based FD-NIRS platform capable of measuring optical properties and tissue chromophore concentrations in real-time. The system provides single-channel FD-NIRS amplitude/phase, optical property, and chromophore data at a maximum display rate of 36.6 kHz, 17.9 kHz, and 10.2 kHz, respectively, and can be scaled to multiple channels as well as integrated into a handheld format. The entire system is enabled by several innovations including an ultra-high-speed k-nearest neighbor lookup table method (maximum of 250,000 inversions/s for large 2500x700 table of absorption and reduced scattering coefficients), embedded FPGA and CPU high-speed co-processing, and high-speed data transfer (due to on-board processing). We show that our 6-wavelength, broad modulation bandwidth (1-400 MHz) system can be used to perform 2D high-density spatial mapping of optical properties.


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