DocumentCode :
31903
Title :
Laser Speckle Contrast Imaging: Theory, Instrumentation and Applications
Author :
Senarathna, J. ; Rege, Aunshul ; Nan Li ; Thakor, Nitish V.
Author_Institution :
Dept. of Biomed. Eng., Johns Hopkins Univ., Baltimore, MD, USA
Volume :
6
fYear :
2013
fDate :
2013
Firstpage :
99
Lastpage :
110
Abstract :
Laser Speckle Contrast Imaging (LSCI) is a wide field of view, non scanning optical technique for observing blood flow. Speckles are produced when coherent light scattered back from biological tissue is diffracted through the limiting aperture of focusing optics. Mobile scatterers cause the speckle pattern to blur; a model can be constructed by inversely relating the degree of blur, termed speckle contrast to the scatterer speed. In tissue, red blood cells are the main source of moving scatterers. Therefore, blood flow acts as a virtual contrast agent, outlining blood vessels. The spatial resolution ( ~ 10 μm) and temporal resolution (10 ms to 10 s) of LSCI can be tailored to the application. Restricted by the penetration depth of light, LSCI can only visualize superficial blood flow. Additionally, due to its non scanning nature, LSCI is unable to provide depth resolved images. The simple setup and non-dependence on exogenous contrast agents have made LSCI a popular tool for studying vascular structure and blood flow dynamics. We discuss the theory and practice of LSCI and critically analyze its merit in major areas of application such as retinal imaging, imaging of skin perfusion as well as imaging of neurophysiology.
Keywords :
bio-optics; biomedical engineering; biomedical optical imaging; blood; blood vessels; cellular biophysics; eye; haemodynamics; haemorheology; laser applications in medicine; neurophysiology; skin; spatiotemporal phenomena; speckle; aperture; biological tissue; blood flow dynamics; blood vessels; blur degree; coherent light scattering; diffraction; focusing optics; laser speckle contrast imaging; light penetration depth; mobile scatterers; neurophysiology imaging; nonscanning optical technique; red blood cells; retinal imaging; scatterer speed; skin perfusion imaging; spatial resolution; speckle pattern; superficial blood flow visualization; temporal resolution; vascular structure; virtual contrast agent; Biomedical imaging; Blood flow; Laser; Spatial resolution; Speckle; Functional imaging; imaging of cortical spreading depression; imaging of stroke; laser speckle contrast imaging; retinal imaging; skin imaging; Animals; Cerebrovascular Circulation; Humans; Lasers; Optical Imaging; Regional Blood Flow; Reproducibility of Results;
fLanguage :
English
Journal_Title :
Biomedical Engineering, IEEE Reviews in
Publisher :
ieee
ISSN :
1937-3333
Type :
jour
DOI :
10.1109/RBME.2013.2243140
Filename :
6422348
Link To Document :
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