Significance: Cerebral vasomotion and associated flowmotion are considered crucial for optimal brain perfusion and metabolic regulation, with reduced vasomotion being linked to cerebrovascular and neurodegenerative disorders. However, the underlying mechanisms and spatiotemporal dynamics of cerebral vasomotion are still poorly understood, underscoring the need for further research and methodological approaches for its comprehensive characterization.
Aim: We aimed to develop an approach for comprehensively characterizing spatiotemporal vasomotion and flowmotion dynamics and apply it to study resting-state activity at vasomotion frequencies (0.
The liver controls blood homeostasis and depends critically on adequate blood supply. While the global regulation of liver blood flow via the hepatic arterial buffer response is well established, the mechanisms governing hepatic sinusoidal hemodynamics remain elusive. We use laser speckle contrast imaging to investigate the hepatic microvascular blood flow in anesthetized rats.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBackground: More than half of patients with ischemic stroke experience futile reperfusion, increasing the risk of death and disabilities despite a successful recanalization. The reason behind this is debated, and we aim to investigate cerebrovascular changes toward a broader understanding of these conditions. We hypothesize that ischemic stroke reperfusion modifies the expression profile in the microvasculature in a spatial manner toward peri-infarct brain edema and circulatory failure.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFHyperemia in response to neural activity is essential for brain health. A hyperemic response delivers O and nutrients, clears metabolic waste, and concomitantly exposes cerebrovascular endothelial cells to hemodynamic forces. While neurovascular research has primarily centered on the front end of hyperemia-neuronal activity-to-vascular response-the mechanical consequences of hyperemia have gone largely unexplored.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFResearch on hippocampal blood flow is essential for gaining insight into its involvement in learning and memory and its role in age-related cognitive impairment and dementia. In this study, we applied laser speckle contrast imaging (LSCI) and dynamic light scattering imaging (DLSI) to monitor perfusion in mouse hippocampus via a chronic, optically transparent window. LSCI scans showed hippocampal blood vessels appear more out of focus than similar caliber vessels in the mouse cortex.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBiomed Opt Express
January 2024
Laser speckle contrast imaging (LSCI) is applied in various biomedical applications for full-field characterization of blood flow and tissue perfusion. The accuracy of the contrast interpretation and its conversion to the blood flow index depends on specific parameters of the optical system and scattering media. One such parameter is the polarisation of detected light, which is often adjusted to minimize specular reflections and image artefacts.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe kidney has a sophisticated vascular structure that performs the unique function of filtering blood and managing blood pressure. Tubuloglomerular feedback is an intra-nephron negative feedback mechanism stabilizing single-nephron blood flow, glomerular filtration rate, and tubular flow rate, which is exhibited as self-sustained oscillations in single-nephron blood flow. We report the application of multi-scale laser speckle imaging to monitor global blood flow changes across the kidney surface (low zoom) and local changes in individual microvessels (high zoom) in normotensive and spontaneously hypertensive rats in vivo.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFLaser speckle contrast imaging (LSCI) is a rapidly developing technology broadly applied for the full-field characterization of tissue perfusion. Over the recent years, significant advancements have been made in interpreting LSCI measurements and improving the technique's accuracy. On the other hand, the method's precision has yet to be studied in detail, despite being as important as accuracy for many biomedical applications.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBiomed Opt Express
April 2023
Laser speckle contrast imaging is a technique that provides valuable physiological information about vascular topology and blood flow dynamics. When using contrast analysis, it is possible to obtain detailed spatial information at the cost of sacrificing temporal resolution and vice versa. Such a trade-off becomes problematic when assessing blood dynamics in narrow vessels.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe tubuloglomerular feedback (TGF) mechanism modulates renal hemodynamics and glomerular filtration rate in individual nephrons. Our study aimed to evaluate the TGF-induced vascular responses by inhibiting Na-K-2Cl co-transporters and sodium-glucose co-transporters in rats. We assessed cortical hemodynamics with high-resolution laser speckle contrast imaging, which enabled the evaluation of blood flow in individual microvessels and analysis of their dynamical patterns in the time-frequency domain.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBiomed Opt Express
April 2022
Laser speckle contrast imaging is a robust and versatile blood flow imaging tool in basic and clinical research for its relatively simple construction and ease of customization. One of its key features is the scalability of the imaged field of view. With minimal changes to the system or analysis, laser speckle contrast imaging allows for high-resolution blood flow imaging through cranial windows or low-resolution perfusion visualization of perfusion over large areas, e.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFLaser speckle contrast imaging (LSCI) is a real-time full-field non-invasive technique, which is broadly applied to visualize blood flow in biomedical applications. In its foundation is the link between the speckle contrast and dynamics of light scattering particles-erythrocytes. The mathematical form describing this relationship, which is critical for accurate blood flow estimation, depends on the sample's light-scattering properties.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFDespite successful recanalization, a significant number of patients with ischemic stroke experience impaired local brain tissue reperfusion with adverse clinical outcome. The cause and mechanism of this multifactorial complication are yet to be understood. At the current moment, major attention is given to dysfunction in blood-brain barrier and capillary blood flow but contribution of exaggerated constriction of cerebral arterioles has also been suggested.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFFront Physiol
January 2021
Chronic cranial windows allow for longitudinal brain imaging experiments in awake, behaving mice. Different imaging technologies have their unique advantages and combining multiple imaging modalities offers measurements of a wide spectrum of neuronal, glial, vascular, and metabolic parameters needed for comprehensive investigation of physiological and pathophysiological mechanisms. Here, we detail a suite of surgical techniques for installation of different cranial windows targeted for specific imaging technologies and their combination.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFWe introduce dynamic light scattering imaging (DLSI) to enable the wide-field measurement of the speckle temporal intensity autocorrelation function. DLSI uses the full temporal sampling of speckle fluctuations and a comprehensive model to identify the dynamic scattering regime and obtain a quantitative image of the scatterer dynamics. It reveals errors in the traditional theory of laser Doppler flowmetry and laser speckle contrast imaging and provides guidance on the best model to use in cerebral blood flow imaging.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFAdv Sci (Weinh)
September 2020
A high-speed, contrast-free, quantitative ultrasound velocimetry (vUS) for blood flow velocity imaging throughout the rodent brain is developed based on the normalized first-order temporal autocorrelation function of the ultrasound field signal. vUS is able to quantify blood flow velocity in both transverse and axial directions, and is validated with numerical simulation, phantom experiments, and in vivo measurements. The functional imaging ability of vUS is demonstrated by monitoring the blood flow velocity changes during whisker stimulation in awake mice.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFCurr Protoc Neurosci
September 2020
Utilization of functional ultrasound (fUS) in cerebral vascular imaging is gaining popularity among neuroscientists. In this article, we describe a chronic surgical preparation method that allows longitudinal studies and therefore is applicable to a wide range of studies, especially on aging, stroke, and neurodegenerative diseases. This method can also be used with awake mice; hence, the deleterious effects of anesthesia on neurovascular responses can be avoided.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFAims: Acute migraine attack in familial hemiplegic migraine type 2 (FHM2) patients is characterized by sequential hypo- and hyperperfusion. FHM2 is associated with mutations in the Na, K-ATPase α2 isoform. Heterozygous mice bearing one of these mutations (α2+/G301R mice) were shown to have elevated cerebrovascular tone and, thus, hypoperfusion that might lead to elevated concentrations of local metabolites.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFJ Cereb Blood Flow Metab
October 2020
Gamma activity arising from the interplay between pyramidal neurons and fast-spiking parvalbumin (PV) interneurons is an integral part of higher cognitive functions and is assumed to contribute significantly to brain metabolic responses. Cerebral metabolic rate of oxygen (CMRO) responses were evoked by optogenetic stimulation of cortical PV interneurons and pyramidal neurons. We found that CMRO responses depended on neuronal activation, but not on the power of gamma activity induced by optogenetic stimulation.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBiomed Opt Express
December 2018
Systemic flow variations caused by the cardiac cycle can play a role or be an important marker in both normal and pathological conditions. The shape, magnitude and propagation speed of the flow pulse reflect mechanical properties of the vasculature and are known to vary significantly with vascular diseases. Most conventional techniques are not capable of imaging cardiac activity in the microcirculation due to spatial and/or temporal resolution limitations and instead make inferences about propagation speed by making measurements at two points along an artery.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe use of laser speckle contrast imaging (LSCI) has expanded rapidly for characterizing the motion of scattering particles. Speckle contrast is related to the dynamics of the scattering particles via a temporal autocorrelation function, but the quality of various elements of the imaging system can adversely affect the quality of the signal recorded by LSCI. While it is known that the laser coherence affects the speckle contrast, it is generally neglected in in vivo LSCI studies and was not thoroughly addressed in a practical matter.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFTubuloglomerular feedback and the myogenic mechanism form an ensemble in renal afferent arterioles that regulate single-nephron blood flow and glomerular filtration. Each mechanism generates a self-sustained oscillation, the mechanisms interact, and the oscillations synchronize. The synchronization generates a bimodal electrical signal in the arteriolar wall that propagates retrograde to a vascular node, where it meets similar electrical signals from other nephrons.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFKey Points: The prevailing dogma about neurogenic regulation of vascular tone consists of major vasodilatation caused by CGRP (and possibly substance P) released from sensory-motor nerves and vasoconstriction caused by noradrenaline, ATP and neuropeptode Y release from sympathetic nerves. Most studies on perivascular nerve-mediated vasodilatation are made in vitro. In the present study, we provide evidence indicating that in vivo electrical perivascular nerve stimulation in rat mesenteric small arteries causes a large β1-adrenoceptor-mediated vasodilatation, which contrasts with a smaller vasodilatation caused by endogenous CGRP that is only visible after inhibition of Y1 NPY receptors.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFDairy products exhibit several physical properties that are crucial to define whether we like the food or not: firmness, creaminess, thickness, or lightness. Viscosity changes the flow properties of food and influences the appearance and the consistency of a product; this control variable is important in most production stages-manufacture, processing, and storage. Viscosity of heterogeneous products at a given temperature depends on its composition and physical state of its substances.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFKey Points: Substantial information on rat mesenteric small artery physiology and pharmacology based on in vitro experiments is available. Little is known about the relevance of this for artery function in vivo. We here present an intravital model where rat mesenteric small artery diameters are studied under isolated and controlled conditions in situ with simultaneous measurement of blood flow.
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