Title :
Cerebral blood flow recorded at high sensitivity in two dimensions using high resolution optical imaging
Author :
Vanzetta, Ivo ; Deneux, Thomas ; Masson, Guillaume ; Faugeras, Olivier
Author_Institution :
Team "Dynamique de la Vision et de l\´\´Action", Universite de la Mediterranee, Marseille
Abstract :
Knowledge about sensory-evoked blood-flow changes is essential for constraining hemodynamic response models used to interpret functional brain imaging signals, such as fMRI. Here, we extracted 2-dimensional blood-flow and its temporal modulations from high-resolution optical imaging data in the awake monkey. Optical imaging allows to track moving erythrocytes (or small clusters thereof), thus providing, albeit noisy, information about their velocity in individual blood vessels, across the whole imaged area. Here, we illustrate the algorithms that allowed us to extract, at the single microvessel level, red blood cell (RBC) motion information from the noisy optical signals. For this purpose, we developed an algorithm that is both robust and computationally efficient, using the structure tensor, known to detect an average direction of image intensity gradient. This structure tensor tool is applied to detect trajectory directions in the spatio-temporal data. Since blood-flow modulation by the cardiac pulsation was clearly detected, our method should be applicable also to study blood-flow modulations by neuronal activity, and their spatio-temporal patterns
Keywords :
biomedical optical imaging; blood; blood vessels; brain; cell motility; haemodynamics; image motion analysis; medical image processing; spatiotemporal phenomena; awake monkey; blood vessels; cardiac pulsation; cerebral blood flow; erythrocyte tracking; functional brain imaging signals; hemodynamic response models; high resolution optical imaging; image intensity gradient; neuronal activity; noisy optical signals; red blood cell motion; sensory-evoked blood-flow changes; spatiotemporal patterns; structure tensor; Blood flow; Brain modeling; Data mining; Hemodynamics; Image resolution; Optical imaging; Optical modulation; Optical noise; Signal resolution; Tensile stress;
Conference_Titel :
Biomedical Imaging: Nano to Macro, 2006. 3rd IEEE International Symposium on
Conference_Location :
Arlington, VA
Print_ISBN :
0-7803-9576-X
DOI :
10.1109/ISBI.2006.1625155