Measurement of flow-mediated dilation of mouse femoral artery in vivo by optical coherence tomography.
Weiye SongLibo ZhouKevin L KotHuijie FanJingyan HanJi YiPublished in: Journal of biophotonics (2018)
Flow-mediated vasodilation (FMD) is used for assessment of vascular endothelial function in humans as a predictor of cardiovascular events. It has been challenging to carry it on preclinical murine models due to the diminutive size of the femoral artery. Here, we present a new approach to accurately measure the blood velocity and femoral artery diameters of mice by acquiring Doppler optical coherence tomography and optical coherence tomography angiography continuously within 1 single experimental scanning protocol. Using the 3-dimensional imaging and new velocity algorithm, the measurement precision of diameter, blood flow, velocity and wall shear stress are improved to 0.91%, 11.0%, 10.7% and 14.0%, respectively. FMD of healthy mouse femoral artery measured by this method was 11.96% ± 0.98%, which was blunted to 5.69% ± 0.4% by intravenous administration of endothelial nitric oxide synthase inhibitor (L-NG -Nitroarginine methyl ester), in agreement with that reported in the literature.
Keyphrases
- blood flow
- cardiovascular events
- optical coherence tomography
- nitric oxide synthase
- coronary artery disease
- high resolution
- nitric oxide
- systematic review
- diabetic retinopathy
- randomized controlled trial
- machine learning
- optic nerve
- high dose
- low dose
- stem cells
- bone marrow
- mass spectrometry
- adipose tissue
- metabolic syndrome
- electron microscopy
- clinical evaluation