4.7 Article

A Wearable Fiberless Optical Sensor for Continuous Monitoring of Cerebral Blood Flow in Mice

Publisher

IEEE-INST ELECTRICAL ELECTRONICS ENGINEERS INC
DOI: 10.1109/JSTQE.2018.2854597

Keywords

Optical spectroscopy; blood flow measurement; brain; implantable biomedical devices

Funding

  1. National Institutes of Health [R21-HD091118, R21-AR062356, R21-AG046762, COBRE 1P20GM121327]
  2. American Heart Association [16GRNT30820006, 14SDG20480186]
  3. National Science Foundation [1539068]

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Continuous and longitudinal monitoring of cerebral blood flow (CBF) in animal models provides information for studying the mechanisms and interventions of various cerebral diseases. Since anesthesia may affect brain hemodynamics, researchers have been seeking wearable devices for use in conscious animals. We present a wearable diffuse speckle contrast flowmeter (DSCF) probe for monitoring CBF variations in mice. The DSCF probe consists of a small low-power near-infrared laser diode as a point source and an ultrasmall low-power CMOS camera as a two-dimensional detector array, which can be affixed on a mouse head. The movement of red blood cells in brain cortex (i.e., CBF) produces spatial fluctuations of laser speckles, which are captured by the camera. The DSCF system was calibrated using tissue phantoms and validated in a human forearm and mouse brains for continuous monitoring of blood flow increases and decreases against the established technologies. Significant correlations were observed among these measurements (R-2 >= 0.80, p < 14(-5)). This small fiberless probe has the potential to be worn by a freely moving conscious mouse. Moreover, the flexible source-detector configuration allows for varied probing depths up to similar to 8 mm, which is sufficient for transcranially detecting CBF in the cortices of rodents and newborn infants.

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