Paper
17 February 2017 Clinical applications of high-speed blood flow measurements with diffuse correlation spectroscopy
Ashwin B. Parthasarathy, Wesley B. Baker, Kimberly Gannon, Michael T. Mullen, John A. Detre, Arjun G. Yodh
Author Affiliations +
Abstract
Diffuse Correlation Spectroscopy (DCS) is an increasingly popular non-invasive optical technique to clinically measure deep tissue blood flow, albeit at slow measurement rates of 0.5-1 Hz. We recently reported the development of a new ‘fast’ DCS instrument that continuously measures blood flow at 50-100 Hz (simultaneously from 8 channels), using conventional DCS sources/detectors, and optimized software computations. A particularly interesting result was our ability to optically record pulsatile micro-vascular blood flow waveforms, and therein readily identify high frequency features such as the dicrotic notch. Here, we showcase the utility and potential of high-speed measurements of blood flow (and arterial blood pressure) in a few clinical applications. First, we employ the fast-DCS instrumentation to measure cerebral autoregulation (CVAR) dynamics. Cerebral autoregulation refers to the mechanism by which cerebral blood flow (CBF) is maintained during fluctuations in blood pressure; CVAR is impaired in the injured brain. We derive an index of autoregulation by measuring the rates of decrease (and recovery) of blood flow and blood pressure following a sudden, induced change in systemic blood pressure (e.g., bilateral thigh cuff deflation). Our pilot experiments in healthy volunteers show that DCS measured rates of micro-vascular regulation are comparable to conventional large vessel regulatory metrics (e.g., measured with transcranial Doppler ultrasound). Second, we utilized pulsatile blood flow oscillations in cerebral arteries to estimate the critical closing pressure (CrCP), i.e., the arterial blood pressure at which CBF approaches zero. Pilot experiments in healthy subjects show good agreement between CrCP measured with DCS and transcranial Doppler ultrasound.
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Ashwin B. Parthasarathy, Wesley B. Baker, Kimberly Gannon, Michael T. Mullen, John A. Detre, and Arjun G. Yodh "Clinical applications of high-speed blood flow measurements with diffuse correlation spectroscopy", Proc. SPIE 10059, Optical Tomography and Spectroscopy of Tissue XII, 1005905 (17 February 2017); https://doi.org/10.1117/12.2253488
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KEYWORDS
Blood circulation

Blood pressure

Cerebral blood flow

Tissue optics

Resistance

Brain

Spectroscopy

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