A feasible way to explore real blood vessels thermal responses to laser irradiation by combing optical clearing and the reflectance spectra measurements: animal experiment study.
Hong ZhangYanjie BianWei YinDong LiZhaoxia YingPublished in: Lasers in medical science (2024)
Laser therapy has been widely used to treat port-wine stains (PWS) and other cutaneous vascular lesions via selective photothermolysis. Animal models are a valuable tool for investigating thermal responses beneath the skin. However, in previous animal experiments, such as the dorsal skin chamber model, one side of the skin was removed, resulting in the loss of mechanical support for the target blood vessel. In this study, the optical clearing technique was applied to the dorsal skin, allowing direct observation of real thermal responses within the tissue without removing the covering skin. The target blood vessels were irradiated with a pulsed 1064 nm Nd: YAG laser. The corresponding thermal responses were recorded using a CCD camera. Additionally, variations in skin reflectance spectra were measured before and after laser irradiation. Due to the optical clearing and reflectance spectra measurement, vessel responses such as contraction, reperfusion, and full occlusion were correlated with specific variation patterns in reflectance spectral signals.
Keyphrases
- soft tissue
- high speed
- wound healing
- high resolution
- spinal cord
- neuropathic pain
- magnetic resonance
- heart failure
- magnetic resonance imaging
- optical coherence tomography
- radiation therapy
- left ventricular
- brain injury
- atrial fibrillation
- acute coronary syndrome
- deep learning
- convolutional neural network
- smooth muscle