Now there’s a better way to spy on the blood in your veins. Doctors
already have two techniques to monitor obstructions in blood vessels,
but they both have limitations.
The first, Doppler ultrasound imaging,
involves irradiating tissue with ultrasound waves; the waves that
reflect off flowing blood acquire a Doppler shift, which can be used to
pick out blood and calculate its speed. Doppler can't distinguish
flowing blood from surrounding tissue unless it's moving quickly,
however, which makes minor blood vessels invisible.
The second
technique, photoacoustic imaging, uses an infrared laser that, when
absorbed by blood, heats it. The resulting sudden expansion creates a
pressure wave that can be detected outside the body. Photoacoustic
imaging picks out blood vessels better, but it can't see flow in a
continuous stream.
In a study published today in Physical Review Letters,
researchers combined the two techniques, utilizing the fact that
ultrasound also has a slight heating effect; pulsed ultrasound creates
periodic hot spots in blood vessels. By tracking the movement of these
hot spots (shown in yellow above) using photoacoustic imaging, the team
could calculate the flow rate of the blood,
even when it moved slowly through small vessels like capillaries. The
researchers hope their technique may aid functional brain imaging, help
cancer screening and treatment monitoring, and let doctors detect
atherosclerosis before a patient has a heart attack.
0 comments:
Post a Comment