Hoshi, Yoko

New Horizons in Time-Domain Diffuse Optical Spectroscopy and Imaging - Basel, Switzerland MDPI - Multidisciplinary Digital Publishing Institute 2020 - 1 electronic resource (246 p.)

Open Access

Jöbsis was the first to describe the in vivo application of near-infrared spectroscopy (NIRS), also called diffuse optical spectroscopy (DOS). NIRS was originally designed for the clinical monitoring of tissue oxygenation, and today it has also become a useful tool for neuroimaging studies (functional near-infrared spectroscopy, fNIRS). However, difficulties in the selective and quantitative measurements of tissue hemoglobin (Hb), which have been central in the NIRS field for over 40 years, remain to be solved. To overcome these problems, time-domain (TD) and frequency-domain (FD) measurements have been tried. Presently, a wide range of NIRS instruments are available, including commonly available commercial instruments for continuous wave (CW) measurements, based on the modified Beer–Lambert law (steady-state domain measurements). Among these measurements, the TD measurement is the most promising approach, although compared with CW and FD measurements, TD measurements are less common, due to the need for large and expensive instruments with poor temporal resolution and limited dynamic range. However, thanks to technological developments, TD measurements are increasingly being used in research, and also in various clinical settings. This Special Issue highlights issues at the cutting edge of TD DOS and diffuse optical tomography (DOT). It covers all aspects related to TD measurements, including advances in hardware, methodology, the theory of light propagation, and clinical applications.


Creative Commons


English

books978-3-03936-101-4 9783039361007 9783039361014

10.3390/books978-3-03936-101-4 doi


Medicine
Neurosciences

breast cancer diffuse optical spectroscopy chemotherapy time-domain spectroscopy near-infrared spectroscopy radiative transfer equation diffusion equation biological tissue time-domain instruments light propagation in tissue optical properties of tissue diffuse optical tomography fluorescence diffuse optical tomography time-resolved spectroscopy NIRS diffuse optics time-domain time-resolved brain oxygenation tissue saturation scattering absorption 3-hour sitting near infrared time-resolved spectroscopy compression stocking tissue oxygenation extracellular water intracellular water circumference gastrocnemius neonate vaginal delivery cerebral blood volume cerebral hemoglobin oxygen saturation near-infrared time-resolved spectroscopy near infrared spectroscopy aging prefrontal cortex TRS magnetic resonance imaging brain atrophy VSRAD optical pathlength hemoglobin cognitive function time-domain NIRS null source-detector separation brain noninvasive subcutaneous white adipose tissue tissue total hemoglobin diffuse light inverse problems optical tomography inverse problem datatypes diffusion approximation highly forward scattering of photons diffusion and delta-Eddington approximations characteristic length and time scales of photon transport n/a