Programmable scanning diffuse speckle contrast imaging of cerebral blood flow
Faezeh Akbari, Xuhui Liu, Fatemeh Hamedi, Mehrana Mohtasebi, Lei Chen,, Guoqiang Yu

TL;DR
This paper introduces a low-cost, portable programmable scanning diffuse speckle contrast imaging (PS-DSCI) technology that enables fast, high-resolution, depth-sensitive cerebral blood flow imaging in rodents, suitable for bedside monitoring.
Contribution
The study develops a novel PS-DSCI system using a digital micromirror device and new algorithms, improving resolution and speed over traditional point scanning methods.
Findings
Successfully imaged CBF variations in vivo in mice.
Resolved tissue depth-specific particle flow contrasts.
Enhanced spatiotemporal resolution compared to conventional methods.
Abstract
Significance: Cerebral blood flow (CBF) imaging is crucial for diagnosing cerebrovascular diseases. However, existing large neuroimaging techniques with high cost, low sampling rate, and poor mobility make them unsuitable for continuous and longitudinal CBF monitoring at the bedside. Aim: This study aimed to develop a low-cost, portable, programmable scanning diffuse speckle contrast imaging (PS-DSCI) technology for fast, high-density, and depth-sensitive imaging of CBF in rodents. Approach: The PS-DSCI employed a programmable digital micromirror device (DMD) for remote line-shape laser (785 nm) scanning on tissue surface and synchronized a 2D camera for capturing boundary diffuse laser speckle contrasts. New algorithms were developed to address deformations of line-shape scanning, thus minimizing CBF reconstruction artifacts. The PS-DSCI was examined in head-simulating phantoms and…
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