Open Access
26 January 2017 Impact of temporal resolution on estimating capillary RBC-flux with optical coherence tomography
Baoqiang Li, Hui Wang, Buyin Fu, Ruopeng Wang, Sava Sakadžić, David A. Boas
Author Affiliations +
Abstract
Optical coherence tomography (OCT) has been used to measure capillary red blood cell (RBC) flux. However, one important technical issue is that the accuracy of this method is subject to the temporal resolution (Δt) of the repeated RBC-passage B-scans. A ceiling effect arises due to an insufficient Δt limiting the maximum RBC-flux that can be measured. In this letter, we first present simulations demonstrating that Δt=1.5  ms permits measuring RBC-flux up to 150  RBCs/s with an underestimation of 9%. The simulations further show that measurements with Δt=3 and 4.5 ms provide relatively less accurate estimates for typical physiological fluxes. We provide experimental data confirming the simulation results showing that reduced temporal resolution (i.e., a longer Δt) results in an underestimation of mean flux and compresses the distribution of measured fluxes, which potentially confounds physiological interpretation of the results. The results also apply to RBC-passage measurements made with confocal and two-photon microscopy for estimating capillary RBC-flux.

1.

Introduction

Understanding cerebral microvascular flow regulation and capacity to deliver oxygen to cortical tissue is of critical importance in assessing brain physiology and pathophysiology.1 In addition, cerebral cortical microvascular networks play a vital role in delivering oxygen and nutrients to support brain cognitive functions.2 Recent studies suggest that heterogeneity in capillary flow either passively correlates with3 or actively regulates4 oxygen extraction.2,5 To further understand the properties of the cerebral microcirculation, optical techniques,—for example, two-photon microscopy (TPM) and more recently, optical coherence tomography (OCT)—have been advanced to investigate the highly heterogeneous and dynamic capillary properties at high spatiotemporal resolution, and preferably over many capillaries simultaneously for strengthening the statistical power of the analysis.6,7

The OCT-based RBC-passage technique detects reflected optical intensity changes due to RBCs passing through the optical focal volume.7 Because of the high spatial sampling rate of OCT, this technique has the ability of measuring absolute RBC-flux of multiple capillaries simultaneously,7,8 which makes it suitable for characterizing the distribution of capillary flux in microvascular networks and neurocapillary coupling.9,10 However, an insufficient temporal resolution (Δt) of this RBC-passage technique may fail in capturing RBCs with very high speed when passing the focal volume, inducing aliasing in the measurements, consequently confounding physiological interpretation of the results. The aim of this study is to investigate how Δt impacts the accuracy in estimating the capillary flux and to provide general guidance for the Δt requirement when measuring the distribution of flux and/or mean flux of cortical capillaries in rodents by the OCT RBC-passage technique. Our simulations show that Δt=1.5  ms underestimates the flux with an underestimation of 9%, at the true flux (synthetized with Δt=0.75  ms) of 150  RBCs/s; in contrast, Δt=3 and 4.5 ms cause an underestimation of 57% and 74%, respectively. At the true flux of 130  RBCs/s, Δt=1.5, 3, and 4.5 cause an underestimation of 6%, 50%, and 70%, respectively. Furthermore, experimental data with either Δt=0.75 or 1.5 ms were acquired in two separate groups of mice for evaluating the sufficiency of Δt=1.5  ms. The experimental results show that with Δt=1.5  ms the measured flux was underestimated by 5% at 130  RBCs/s compared with the flux measured with Δt=0.75  ms, which was the maximum flux that was measured in our experiments. This observed 5% underestimation of flux at 130  RBCs/s is very close to our simulation result. The downsampled experimental fluxes with Δt=3 and 4.5 ms showed the compressed distribution of flux and the reduction in mean flux, which we also observed in the simulations. Other studies reported that a resting capillary flux of >150  RBCs/s in rodents was very rare,1114 therefore, Δt=1.5  ms is expected to permit accurately characterizing the distribution of flux and/or the mean flux in cortical capillaries.

2.

Materials and Methods

2.1.

Animals

All animal experimental procedures were reviewed and approved by the Massachusetts General Hospital Subcommittee on Research Animal Care. We used CD1-Elite mice (Charles River Laboratories, n=10, male, 3 to 4 months old, 35  g) in this study. All surgical procedures, including the sealed cranial window preparation and the cannulation of femoral artery, were conducted under 1.5% to 2% isoflurane anesthesia in air/O2 mixture. In experiments, mice (n=10) were separated into two groups: group 1 (n1=6) and group 2 (n2=4). Acquisition was conducted under α-chloralose administered intravenously.10 Body temperature was maintained at 37°C throughout all experiments. In experiments, the mean systemic arterial blood pressure and arterial partial pressure of O2 and CO2 averaged over n=10 mice were 93, 96, and 35 mmHg, respectively; the pH of systemic arterial blood was 7.36.

2.2.

Spectral-Domain Optical Coherence Tomography

Capillary RBC-passage B-scans were conducted using an optimized commercial spectral-domain OCT (SD-OCT) system (Thorlabs Inc.).7 The light source has a central wavelength of 1310 nm with a 170-nm bandwidth yielding an axial resolution of 3.5  μm in brain tissue. The transverse resolution was 3.5  μm when using the 10× objective (NA=0.26). This SD-OCT system has a maximum acquisition rate of 47,000  A-lines/s.

2.3.

Determination of the Red Blood Cell Flux

The details of the RBC-passage technique have been described elsewhere.7 Figures 1(a) and 1(b) help explain the acquisition protocol of the RBC-passage B-scan. Figure 1(a) displays a picture of a typical cranial window over mouse cortex. As shown by the red lines in Fig. 1(a), three lines were typically selected in the cranial window in each mouse for conducting the OCT RBC-passage B-scans. Each RBC-passage B-scan consisted of 30 or 60 A-lines and spanned a distance of 50 or 100  μm in the X-Z cross-sectional plane, which yields Δt=0.75 or 1.5  ms, respectively. Each line was consecutively scanned for 2 min. Because the OCT speckle fluctuation in rodent cortex is mainly due to the motion of RBCs,15 capillaries [bright pixels in Fig. 1(b)] could be identified and manually selected based on the B-scan variance images. For each selected capillary, the pixel intensities at the same coordinate of the consecutive B-scans were extracted to reveal the RBC-passage time course. Here, we used a custom-developed MATLAB graphic user interface to make sure the selected points were in capillaries by selecting points that had the largest intensity fluctuations. Next, the RBC-passage time courses were denoised by a temporal 1-D Gaussian filter with standard deviation σ=1.5  ms to reduce false-positive noise peaks when counting the RBC passages. The σ relates to the FWHM as FWHM=22ln2σ, so, σ=1.5  ms would yield a FWHM of 3.5  ms. The RBC-flux of 200  RBCs/s corresponds to an RBC passing every 5 ms in average. Thus, using a Gaussian filter with FWHM=3.5  ms, we expect to diminish the noise but not mask the RBC passages when RBCs pass every 5 ms. Such a high flux of 200  RBCs/s was observed, which was driven by high RBC linear density instead of high speed.14 The RBC-passage time courses were then normalized with the range from 0 to 1 (i.e., the minimum value was subtracted from the time course then the time course was normalized by the maximum value). A MATLAB function “findpeaks” was used to count the RBC-passage peaks by employing a threshold set at the half-maximum intensity (i.e., the threshold was 0.5 after the time courses were normalized by the maximum value) of each RBC-passage time course. The number of RBC-passage peaks was averaged over the 2-min scan for each capillary to obtain a mean flux.

Fig. 1

(a) The picture displays a typical cranial window showing the vasculature of the cortical surface. The red lines indicate where repeated B-scans were performed to obtain the RBC-passage time courses. (b) Interlaced B-scan images illustrate the repetitive RBC-passage B-scan. (c)–(f) Representative RBC-passage time courses (0.5 s) of four different capillaries are presented.

JBO_22_1_016014_f001.png

The performance of the RBC-passage peak counting procedure was evaluated by simulations. Briefly, speckle noise (filtered from experimental data) was added to synthetized RBC passages (described in Sec. 2.4). Peak counting was performed on those RBC passages with and without filtering (σ=1.5  ms). Without filtering, the ratio of the estimated flux to true flux was 179% due to false detections associated with noise. With filtering, the ratio decreased to 101%.

2.4.

Numerical Modeling of Red Blood Cell Flux

We modeled the intensity change due to RBC passage in a virtual capillary by a Gaussian function: f(t)=exp[(tto)22σ2], where t represents a time point in an RBC-passage time course; t0 is the center time point of a single RBC passage. According to the previous study,7 the RBC-speed (VRBC) relates to the RBC-diameter (φRBC) and the Gaussian FWHM by VRBC=φRBC22ln2σ. Here, we set φRBC in our simulations to 6.5  μm.7 As reported,14 the flux (fRBC) relates to VRBC and the distance between neighboring RBCs (dRBC) as fRBC=VRBC/dRBC. Then we numerically investigated the RBC-passage time courses for a range of VRBC and dRBC. Specifically, 40 VRBC were evenly selected between 0.1 and 3.5  mm/s, which covers the range of capillary VRBC reported in the literature.1114,1626 The mean value of dRBC was reported to be 14±2  μm.14 In simulation, 20 different dRBC were evenly chosen between 12 and 26  μm. For each RBC-passage time course, VRBC is fixed for all the RBCs in that time course; and the specific dRBC between neighboring RBCs was uniformly distributed around a certain mean dRBC. So, combinations of 40 VRBC and 20 dRBC result in 40×20=800 RBC-passage time courses. Every RBC-passage time course was generated for 2 min of simulation time with Δt=0.75  ms. Each of the 800 RBC-passage time courses was regenerated 100 times with different random RBC distributions for averaging. In order to investigate the impact of Δt, each of the 800×100=80,000 RBC-passage time courses with Δt=0.75  ms was downsampled to Δt=1.5, 3, and 4.5 ms. With these four different Δt’s, a total of 4×80,000=320,000 RBC-passage time courses were obtained; each of them yielded a mean flux fRBC. The fRBC from the individual RBC-passage time courses was binned for comparing results with different Δt’s.

3.

Results

Representative RBC-passage time courses (0.5-s trace) of four different capillaries are shown in Figs. 1(c)1(f). For the four representative capillaries, the mean fluxes averaged over the 2-min scan are 91, 60, 56, and 75  BBCs/s, respectively.

3.1.

Effect of B-Scan Temporal Resolution: Numerical Modeling

We first investigate the impact of Δt on the estimation of flux by numerical modeling. Figures 2(a)2(c) show three synthetized RBC-passage time courses (0.2-s trace). In these three time courses, the mean dRBC was fixed at 14  μm; but the individual dRBC between neighboring RBCs were randomly varied around 14  μm. In Figs. 2(a)2(c), the VRBC is 2, 1, and 0.8  mm/s, and the resultant flux is 100, 50, and 40  RBCs/s, respectively. The RBC-passage time courses with Δt=0.75  ms are in red; and the Δt=4.5  ms in blue. This illustration indicates that Δt=4.5  ms might be appropriate for accurate estimation of flux when the VRBC<0.8  mm/s but underestimates flux when VRBC>1  mm/s.

Fig. 2

(a)–(c) Illustration of aliasing with simulated RBC-passage time courses with VRBC=2, 1 and 0.8  mm/s, respectively. The “true” time courses (Δt=0.75  ms) are in red, while the downsampled ones (Δt=4.5  ms) are in blue. (d) Comparison between simulated fluxes with Δt=0.75  ms, and the simulated fluxes with all Δt’s (0.75, 1.5, 3, and 4.5 ms). (e) Comparison between experimental fluxes with Δt=0.75  ms, and the experimental fluxes with all Δt’s (0.75, 1.5, 3, and 4.5 ms). (f)–(h) Histograms of experimental fluxes with Δt=1.5, 3, and 4.5 ms.

JBO_22_1_016014_f002.png

To quantify this ceiling effect with simulations, we synthetized RBC-passage time courses with different combinations of VRBC and dRBC (see details in Sec. 2.4). The comparison between the simulated fluxes with Δt=0.75  ms and the fluxes with Δt=0.75, 1.5, 3, and 4.5 ms is presented in Fig. 2(d). Here, the x-axis is the simulated flux with Δt=0.75  ms; the y-axis is the simulated fluxes with Δt=0.75, 1.5, 3, and 4.5 ms. The green line shows flux with Δt=0.75  ms, which serves as a reference for comparison. Ideally, the estimated flux should match the true flux. We expect that as Δt becomes longer that the estimated flux will underestimate the true value, particularly at large flux values. Comparing with the fluxes with Δt=0.75  ms, Fig. 2(d) shows that with Δt=1.5, 3, and 4.5 ms, the fluxes are underestimated by 9%, 57%, and 74%, respectively, at the true flux of 150  RBCs/s. At the true flux of 130  RBCs/s, Δt=1.5, 3, and 4.5 cause an underestimation of 6%, 50%, and 70%, respectively.

3.2.

Effect of B-Scan Temporal Resolution: Experimental Data

In experiments, the RBC-passage B-scans were performed in mice of group 1 (n1=6) with Δt=1.5  ms, and group 2 (n2=4) with Δt=0.75  ms. In both groups, the measurements were obtained at cortical depths up to 700  μm but mainly around 500  μm. The original RBC-passage time courses of group 1 that were acquired with Δt=1.5  ms were downsampled to get two additional datasets with Δt=3 and 4.5 ms. Similarly, the original RBC-passage time courses of group 2 that were acquired with Δt=0.75  ms were downsampled to get three additional datasets with Δt=1.5, 3, and 4.5 ms. We then calculated the mean flux for each RBC-passage time course with different Δt’s to investigate the impact of Δt. Figure 2(e) shows fluxes measured in group 2. In Fig. 2(e), the X-axis presents the experimental fluxes with Δt=0.75  ms, which served as the “truth” in the experimental scenario; and the Y-axis is the fluxes with Δt=0.75, 1.5, 3, and 4.5 ms. Comparing with the fluxes with Δt=0.75  ms, Fig. 2(e) showed that fluxes with Δt=1.5  ms are accurately estimated with an underestimation of 5% at 130  RBCs/s, which is the maximum flux measured in our experiments. In contrast, with Δt=3 and 4.5 ms, the fluxes are underestimated by 19% and 42%, respectively, at the flux of 130  RBCs/s.

The histograms in Figs. 2(f)2(h) present the distribution of flux measured in 313 capillaries over n=10 mice. As shown, when Δt becomes longer, the distribution of flux becomes more compressed and left-shifted to lower fluxes, as would be expected due to aliasing introducing a ceiling effect. The mean flux is 57, 47, and 38  RBCs/s, with Δt=1.5, 3, and 4.5 ms, respectively, showing a reduction of the mean flux with longer Δt’s.

4.

Discussion and Conclusion

We investigated the impact of temporal resolution on the accuracy of estimating RBC-flux based on the OCT RBC-passage technique. Simulations show that with Δt=1.5  ms, the flux is underestimated by 9% for fluxes up to 150  RBCs/s and becomes worse for larger fluxes. For longer Δt’s, aliasing contaminates the measurements and introduces a significant underestimation of flux. Specifically, with Δt=3.0 and 4.5 ms, the flux is underestimated by 57% and 74%, respectively, at the true flux of 150  RBCs/s.

Capillary fluxes were experimentally measured in two groups of mice (total n=10) with Δt=1.5 and 0.75 ms in groups 1 and 2, respectively. The results demonstrate that with Δt=1.5, 3, and 4.5 ms, the flux is underestimated by 5%, 19%, and 42%, respectively, at the maximum flux of 130  RBCs/s that was measured with Δt=0.75  ms. Simulation shows a similar trend in that Δt=1.5, 3, and 4.5 cause an underestimation of 6%, 50%, and 70%, at the true flux of 130  RBCs/s, respectively. The similarity of the simulation and experimental results support our interpretation that the underestimation of flux with longer Δt’s arises from aliasing. This aliasing results in misinterpretation of the RBC-flux characteristics, as illustrated in the histograms presented in Figs. 2(f)2(h), revealing a compression of the distribution of flux as well as a reduction in the mean flux with longer Δt’s.

One may argue that shorter Δt than 1.5 ms, e.g., Δt=0.75  ms, will enable accurately measuring higher fluxes. However, shorter Δt means smaller FOV, in turn, fewer measurements. On the contrary, longer Δt will allow a larger FOV and more measurements, which benefits a more powerful statistical analysis. Therefore, not readily pushing the speed limit of acquisition, we suggested that Δt=1.5  ms could be necessarily fast to measure typical capillary flux in mice cortex.

Some limitations exist in this study. First, while we found qualitative agreement between the simulations and experiments, some discrepancies can be observed between Figs. 2(d) and 2(e). The simulation in Fig. 2(d) showed a more pronounced and earlier ceiling effect with longer Δt’s. This could be a result of the simulation parameters, e.g., the VRBC and dRBC, being different from the experimental values. For example, dRBC might be distributed differently than the range used in our simulations. Experimentally, there could be capillaries with low VRBC and small dRBC, thus resulting in a high flux that is still resolvable despite a long Δt. As an example, capillary flux as high as 200  RBCs/s14 was reported; but such a high flux was driven by a high RBC linear density instead of high speed (1.5  mm/s), which would be detectable with Δt=1.5  ms. Indeed, many studies have reported that the RBC-speed within most cortical capillaries is <2  mm/s,1114,1626 and thus, passage of a 6.5-μm RBC would be >3  ms, indicating that associated fluxes can be measured with Δt=1.5  ms. Another possibility for this discrepancy is due to the statistics of the measurement noise in the experimental data. Practically, the noise level increases with depth because of optical attenuation. As a result, the filter parameter should be adjusted to adapt to the varying signal-to-noise ratio. Although a constant filter parameter (σ=1.5  ms) has been used to avoid bias in analysis, it might result in a depth-dependent noise reduction. Therefore, the flux would likely be measured more accurately in some superficial capillaries while overestimated in deeper capillaries because of false positives resulting from stronger noise. Second, with the experimental fluxes, we simply evaluated the underestimation of the estimated flux at a downsampled Δt relative to the flux with the fastest Δt=0.75  ms, as we did not know the true flux for the experimental data.

Another limitation of our RBC-passage technique is that we could not distinguish whether or not a dual-peak RBC-passage was because of random orientation of a flowing RBC or two RBCs flowing together. Such a dual-peak RBC-passage might be counted as one in estimating the flux because of the potential undersampling induced by fast RBCs; further, given the filter parameter used (σ=1.5  ms), RBCs need to be spaced by more than 1.5 ms to be resolved as separate RBCs.

Last, we acknowledge that some capillaries with very high speed, e.g., thoroughfare capillaries, can exist18,27 and that the associated fluxes may not be accurately measured with Δt=1.5  ms. Therefore, Δt=1.5  ms would be more appropriate for estimating the mean flux of the majority of capillaries with many branch orders between arterioles and venules, but possibly not sufficient for the relatively rare thoroughfare capillaries.16 Note that possible thoroughfare capillaries are rare and are often located near the brain surface (e.g., 50 to 70  μm);16,18,27 we thus expect that those rare cases do not have a large impact in characterizing the distribution of flux and the mean flux when measuring a large ensemble of capillaries.

In summary, we investigated the impact of temporal resolution on the accuracy of estimating capillary RBC-flux. Simulations and experiments characterized this impact. Our findings support that Δt=1.5  ms permits accurate measurements of RBC-flux up to 150  RBCs/s. Longer Δt’s will result in a ceiling effect that causes underestimation of physiologically reasonable flux values. These results should serve as a general rule in determining the temporal resolution that is necessary to measure the distribution of flux and the mean flux in cortical capillaries in mice. These results are not limited to OCT but also extend to other optical scanning techniques for estimating RBC passage, including confocal microscopy and TPM.

Disclosures

The authors declare no conflicts of interest.

Acknowledgments

This study was supported by the National Institutes of Health grants (R01-EB021018, P01-NS055104, and R01-NS091230). This study was also supported by the Air Force Office of Sponsored Research (AFOSR FA-9550-15-1-0473).

References

1. 

C. Iadecola, “Neurovascular regulation in the normal brain and in Alzheimer’s disease,” Nat. Rev. Neurosci., 5 347 –360 (2004). http://dx.doi.org/10.1038/nrn1387 NRNAAN 1471-003X Google Scholar

2. 

S. N. Jespersen and L. Østergaard, “The roles of cerebral blood flow, capillary transit time heterogeneity, and oxygen tension in brain oxygenation and metabolism,” J. Cereb. Blood Flow Metab., 32 264 –277 (2012). http://dx.doi.org/10.1038/jcbfm.2011.153 Google Scholar

3. 

T. J. Huppert et al., “A multicompartment vascular model for inferring baseline and functional changes in cerebral oxygen metabolism and arterial dilation,” J. Cereb. Blood Flow Metab. Off. J. Int. Soc. Cereb. Blood Flow Metab., 27 1262 –1279 (2007). http://dx.doi.org/10.1038/sj.jcbfm.9600435 Google Scholar

4. 

C. N. Hall et al., “Capillary pericytes regulate cerebral blood flow in health and disease,” Nature, 508 55 –60 (2014). http://dx.doi.org/10.1038/nature13165 Google Scholar

5. 

P. M. Rasmussen, S. N. Jespersen and L. Østergaard, “The effects of transit time heterogeneity on brain oxygenation during rest and functional activation,” J. Cereb. Blood Flow Metab., 35 432 –442 (2015). http://dx.doi.org/10.1038/jcbfm.2014.213 Google Scholar

6. 

W. S. Kamoun et al., “Simultaneous measurement of RBC velocity, flux, hematocrit and shear rate in vascular networks,” Nat. Methods, 7 655 –660 (2010). http://dx.doi.org/10.1038/nmeth.1475 1548-7091 Google Scholar

7. 

J. Lee et al., “Multiple-capillary measurement of RBC speed, flux, and density with optical coherence tomography,” J. Cereb. Blood Flow Metab., 33 1707 –1710 (2013). http://dx.doi.org/10.1038/jcbfm.2013.158 Google Scholar

8. 

H. Ren et al., “Quantitative imaging of red blood cell velocity in vivo using optical coherence Doppler tomography,” Appl. Phys. Lett., 100 233702 (2012). http://dx.doi.org/10.1063/1.4726115 APPLAB 0003-6951 Google Scholar

9. 

J. Lee, W. Wu and D. A. Boas, “Early capillary flux homogenization in response to neural activation,” J. Cereb. Blood Flow Metab., 36 375 –380 (2015). http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/0271678X15605851 Google Scholar

10. 

B. Li et al., “Contribution of low- and high-flux capillaries to slow hemodynamic fluctuations in the cerebral cortex of mice,” J. Cereb. Blood Flow Metab., 36 1351 –1356 (2016). http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/0271678X16649195 Google Scholar

11. 

A. Villringer et al., “Capillary perfusion of the rat brain cortex. An in vivo confocal microscopy study,” Circ. Res., 75 55 –62 (1994). http://dx.doi.org/10.1161/01.RES.75.1.55 CIRUAL 0009-7330 Google Scholar

12. 

D. Kleinfeld, “Cortical blood flow through individual capillaries in rat vibrissa S1 cortex: stimulus-induced changes in flow are comparable to the underlying fluctuations in flow,” Int. Congr. Ser., 1235 115 –122 (2002). http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/S0531-5131(02)00178-4 Google Scholar

13. 

I. Krolo and A. G. Hudetz, “Hypoxemia alters erythrocyte perfusion pattern in the cerebral capillary network,” Microvasc. Res., 59 72 –79 (2000). http://dx.doi.org/10.1006/mvre.1999.2185 MIVRA6 0026-2862 Google Scholar

14. 

D. Kleinfeld et al., “Fluctuations and stimulus-induced changes in blood flow observed in individual capillaries in layers 2 through 4 of rat neocortex,” Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci., 95 15741 –15746 (1998). http://dx.doi.org/10.1073/pnas.95.26.15741 Google Scholar

15. 

V. J. Srinivasan et al., “Rapid volumetric angiography of cortical microvasculature with optical coherence tomography,” Opt. Lett., 35 43 –45 (2010). http://dx.doi.org/10.1364/OL.35.000043 OPLEDP 0146-9592 Google Scholar

16. 

A. G. Hudetz, “Blood flow in the cerebral capillary network: a review emphasizing observations with intravital microscopy,” Microcirc. N. Y. N., 4 233 –252 (1997). http://dx.doi.org/10.3109/10739689709146787 Google Scholar

17. 

A. G. Hudetz et al., “Effects of hypoxia and hypercapnia on capillary flow velocity in the rat cerebral cortex,” Microvasc. Res., 54 35 –42 (1997). http://dx.doi.org/10.1006/mvre.1997.2023 MIVRA6 0026-2862 Google Scholar

18. 

A. G. Hudetz, G. Fehér and J. P. Kampine, “Heterogeneous autoregulation of cerebrocortical capillary flow: evidence for functional thoroughfare channels?,” Microvasc. Res., 51 131 –136 (1996). http://dx.doi.org/10.1006/mvre.1996.0015 MIVRA6 0026-2862 Google Scholar

19. 

A. G. Hudetz et al., “Video microscopy of cerebrocortical capillary flow: response to hypotension and intracranial hypertension,” Am. J. Physiol., 268 H2202 –H2210 (1995). Google Scholar

20. 

A. G. Hudetz et al., “Effect of hemodilution on RBC velocity, supply rate, and hematocrit in the cerebral capillary network,” J. Appl. Physiol., 87 505 –509 (1999). Google Scholar

21. 

B. B. Biswal and A. G. Hudetz, “Synchronous oscillations in cerebrocortical capillary red blood cell velocity after nitric oxide synthase inhibition,” Microvasc. Res., 52 1 –12 (1996). http://dx.doi.org/10.1006/mvre.1996.0039 MIVRA6 0026-2862 Google Scholar

22. 

J. Seylaz et al., “Dynamic in vivo measurement of erythrocyte velocity and flow in capillaries and of microvessel diameter in the rat brain by confocal laser microscopy,” J. Cereb. Blood Flow Metab. Off. J. Int. Soc. Cereb. Blood Flow Metab., 19 863 –870 (1999). http://dx.doi.org/10.1097/00004647-199908000-00005 Google Scholar

23. 

E. Pinard et al., “Penumbral microcirculatory changes associated with peri-infarct depolarizations in the rat,” Stroke J. Cereb. Circ., 33 606 –612 (2002). http://dx.doi.org/10.1161/hs0202.102738 Google Scholar

24. 

M. L. Schulte, J. D. Wood and A. G. Hudetz, “Cortical electrical stimulation alters erythrocyte perfusion pattern in the cerebral capillary network of the rat,” Brain Res., 963 81 –92 (2003). http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/S0006-8993(02)03848-9 BRREAP 0006-8993 Google Scholar

25. 

E. B. Hutchinson et al., “Spatial flow-volume dissociation of the cerebral microcirculatory response to mild hypercapnia,” Neuroimage, 32 520 –530 (2006). http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.neuroimage.2006.03.033 NEIMEF 1053-8119 Google Scholar

26. 

B. Stefanovic et al., “Functional reactivity of cerebral capillaries,” J. Cereb. Blood Flow Metab., 28 961 –972 (2007). http://dx.doi.org/10.1038/sj.jcbfm.9600590 Google Scholar

27. 

M. Unekawa et al., “Frequency distribution function of red blood cell velocities in single capillaries of the rat cerebral cortex using intravital laser-scanning confocal microscopy with high-speed camera,” Asian Biomed. Res. Rev. News, 2 203 –218 (2008). Google Scholar

Biographies for the authors are not available.

© 2017 Society of Photo-Optical Instrumentation Engineers (SPIE) 1083-3668/2017/$25.00 © 2017 SPIE
Baoqiang Li, Hui Wang, Buyin Fu, Ruopeng Wang, Sava Sakadžić, and David A. Boas "Impact of temporal resolution on estimating capillary RBC-flux with optical coherence tomography," Journal of Biomedical Optics 22(1), 016014 (26 January 2017). https://doi.org/10.1117/1.JBO.22.1.016014
Received: 29 October 2016; Accepted: 9 January 2017; Published: 26 January 2017
Lens.org Logo
CITATIONS
Cited by 9 scholarly publications.
Advertisement
Advertisement
RIGHTS & PERMISSIONS
Get copyright permission  Get copyright permission on Copyright Marketplace
KEYWORDS
Capillaries

Temporal resolution

Optical coherence tomography

Biological research

Blood

Biomedical optics

Brain

Back to Top