Probing brain oxygenation with near infrared spectroscopy
Alexander Gersten, Jacqueline Perle, Amir Raz, Robert Fried

TL;DR
This paper reviews near infrared spectroscopy (NIRS) for measuring brain oxygenation, compares two devices used in experiments, and discusses their capabilities and limitations in clinical and research settings.
Contribution
It provides a comparative analysis of the INVOS Brain Oximeter and HEG spectrophotometer, highlighting their strengths and weaknesses for measuring regional brain oxygenation.
Findings
INVOS device reliably measures rSO2 in clinical settings.
HEG device can track relative changes in brain oxygenation.
Devices differ in sampling rate and measurement precision.
Abstract
The fundamentals of near infrared spectroscopy (NIRS) are reviewed. This technique allows to measure the oxygenation of the brain tissue. The particular problems involved in detecting regional brain oxygenation (rSO2) are discussed. The dominant chromophore (light absorber) in tissue is water. Only in the NIR light region of 650-1000 nm, the overall absorption is sufficiently low, and the NIR light can be detected across a thick layer of tissues, among them the skin, the scull and the brain. In this region, there are many absorbing light chromophores, but only three are important as far as the oxygenation is concerned. They are the hemoglobin (HbO2), the deoxy-hemoglobin (Hb) and cytochrome oxidase (CtOx). In the last 20 years there was an enormous growth in the instrumentation and applications of NIRS. . The devices that were used in our experiments were : Somanetics's INVOS Brain…
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