In vivo laser speckle contrast imaging of microvascular blood perfusion using a chip-on-tip camera

Lukas Markwalder, Rodney Gush, Faisel Khan, Colin E. Murdoch (Lead / Corresponding author), Nikola Krstajić (Lead / Corresponding author)

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Abstract

Laser speckle contrast imaging (LSCI) is an important non-invasive capability for real-time imaging for tissue-perfusion assessment. Yet, the size and weight of current clinical standard LSCI instrumentation restricts usage to mainly peripheral skin perfusion. Miniaturization of LSCI could enable hand-held instrumentation to image internal organ/tissue to produce accurate speckle-perfusion maps. We characterized a 1mm 2 chip-on-tip camera for LSCI of blood perfusion in vivo and with a flow model. A dedicated optical setup was built to compare chip-on-tip camera to a high specification reference camera (GS3) for LSCI. We compared LSCI performance using a calibration standard and a flow phantom. Subsequently the camera assessed placenta perfusion in a small animal model. Lastly, a human study was conducted on the perfusion in fingertips of 13-volunteers. We demonstrate that the chip-on-tip camera can perform wide-field, in vivo, LSCI of tissue perfusion with the ability to measure physiological blood flow changes comparable with a standard reference camera.

Original languageEnglish
Article number109077
Number of pages14
JournaliScience
Volume27
Issue number3
Early online date31 Jan 2024
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 15 Mar 2024

Keywords

  • Medical device
  • Bioengineering
  • Biodevices
  • Materials science
  • Devices

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