65 research outputs found

    New frontiers in time-domain diffuse optics, a review

    Get PDF
    The recent developments in time-domain diffuse optics that rely on physical concepts (e.g., time-gating and null distance) and advanced photonic components (e.g., vertical cavity source-emitting laser as light sources, single photon avalanche diode, and silicon photomultipliers as detectors, fast-gating circuits, and time-to-digital converters for acquisition) are focused. This study shows how these tools could lead on one hand to compact and wearable time-domain devices for point-of-care diagnostics down to the consumer level and on the other hand to powerful systems with exceptional depth penetration and sensitivity

    Wearable, high-density fNIRS and diffuse optical tomography technologies: a perspective

    Get PDF
    Recent progress in optoelectronics has made wearable and high-density functional near-infrared spectroscopy (fNIRS) and diffuse optical tomography (DOT) technologies possible for the first time. These technologies have the potential to open new fields of real-world neuroscience by enabling functional neuroimaging of the human cortex at a resolution comparable to fMRI in almost any environment and population. In this perspective article, we provide a brief overview of the history and the current status of wearable high-density fNIRS and DOT approaches, discuss the greatest ongoing challenges, and provide our thoughts on the future of this remarkable technology

    Optical imaging and spectroscopy for the study of the human brain: status report.

    Get PDF
    This report is the second part of a comprehensive two-part series aimed at reviewing an extensive and diverse toolkit of novel methods to explore brain health and function. While the first report focused on neurophotonic tools mostly applicable to animal studies, here, we highlight optical spectroscopy and imaging methods relevant to noninvasive human brain studies. We outline current state-of-the-art technologies and software advances, explore the most recent impact of these technologies on neuroscience and clinical applications, identify the areas where innovation is needed, and provide an outlook for the future directions

    Optical imaging and spectroscopy for the study of the human brain: status report

    Get PDF
    This report is the second part of a comprehensive two-part series aimed at reviewing an extensive and diverse toolkit of novel methods to explore brain health and function. While the first report focused on neurophotonic tools mostly applicable to animal studies, here, we highlight optical spectroscopy and imaging methods relevant to noninvasive human brain studies. We outline current state-of-the-art technologies and software advances, explore the most recent impact of these technologies on neuroscience and clinical applications, identify the areas where innovation is needed, and provide an outlook for the future directions

    Optical imaging and spectroscopy for the study of the human brain: status report

    Full text link
    This report is the second part of a comprehensive two-part series aimed at reviewing an extensive and diverse toolkit of novel methods to explore brain health and function. While the first report focused on neurophotonic tools mostly applicable to animal studies, here, we highlight optical spectroscopy and imaging methods relevant to noninvasive human brain studies. We outline current state-of-the-art technologies and software advances, explore the most recent impact of these technologies on neuroscience and clinical applications, identify the areas where innovation is needed, and provide an outlook for the future directions. Keywords: DCS; NIRS; diffuse optics; functional neuroscience; optical imaging; optical spectroscop

    Miniaturized Optical Probes for Near Infrared Spectroscopy

    Get PDF
    RÉSUMÉ L’étude de la propagation de la lumière dans des milieux hautement diffus tels que les tissus biologiques (imagerie optique diffuse) est très attrayante, car elle offre la possibilité d’explorer de manière non invasive le milieu se trouvant profondément sous la surface, et de retrouver des informations sur l’absorption (liée à la composition chimique) et sur la diffusion (liée à la microstructure). Dans la gamme spectrale 600-1000 nm, également appelée gamme proche infrarouge (NIR en anglais), l'atténuation de la lumière par le tissu biologique (eau, lipides et hémoglobine) est relativement faible, ce qui permet une pénétration de plusieurs centimètres dans le tissu. En spectroscopie proche infrarouge (NIRS en anglais), de photons sont injectés dans les tissus et le signal émis portant des informations sur les constituants tissulaires est mesuré. La mesure de très faibles signaux dans la plage de longueurs d'ondes visibles et proche infrarouge avec une résolution temporelle de l'ordre de la picoseconde s'est révélée une technique efficace pour étudier des tissus biologiques en imagerie cérébrale fonctionnelle, en mammographie optique et en imagerie moléculaire, sans parler de l'imagerie de la durée de vie de fluorescence, la spectroscopie de corrélation de fluorescence, informations quantiques et bien d’autres. NIRS dans le domaine temporel (TD en anglais) utilise une source de lumière pulsée, généralement un laser fournissant des impulsions lumineuses d'une durée de quelques dizaines de picosecondes, ainsi qu'un appareil de détection avec une résolution temporelle inférieure à la nanoseconde. Le point essentiel de ces mesures est la nécessité d’augmenter la sensibilité pour de plus grandes profondeurs d’investigation, en particulier pour l’imagerie cérébrale fonctionnelle, où la peau, le crâne et le liquide céphalo-rachidien (LCR) masquent fortement le signal cérébral. À ce jour, l'adoption plus large de ces techniques optique non invasives de surveillance est surtout entravée par les composants traditionnels volumineux, coûteux, complexes et fragiles qui ont un impact significatif sur le coût et la dimension de l’ensemble du système. Notre objectif est de développer une sonde NIRS compacte et miniaturisée, qui peut être directement mise en contact avec l'échantillon testé pour obtenir une haute efficacité de détection des photons diffusés, sans avoir recours à des fibres et des lentilles encombrantes pour l'injection et la collection de la lumière. Le système proposé est composé de deux parties: i) une unité d’émission de lumière pulsée et ii) un module de détection à photon unique qui peut être activé et désactivé rapidement. L'unité d'émission de lumière utilisera une source laser pulsée à plus de 80 MHz avec une largeur d'impulsion de picoseconde.----------ABSTRACT The study of light propagation into highly diffusive media like biological tissues (Diffuse Optical Imaging) is highly appealing due to the possibility to explore the medium non-invasively, deep beneath the surface and to recover information both on absorption (related to chemical composition) and on scattering (related to microstructure). In the 600–1000 nm spectral range also known as near-infrared (NIR) range, light attenuation by the biological tissue constituents (i.e. water, lipid, and hemoglobin) is relatively low and allows for penetration through several centimeters of tissue. In near-infrared spectroscopy (NIRS), a light signal is injected into the tissues and the emitted signal carrying information on tissue constituents is measured. The measurement of very faint light signals in the visible and near-infrared wavelength range with picosecond timing resolution has proven to be an effective technique to study biological tissues in functional brain imaging, optical mammography and molecular imaging, not to mention fluorescence lifetime imaging, fluorescence correlation spectroscopy, quantum information and many others. Time Domain (TD) NIRS employs a pulsed light source, typically a laser providing light pulses with duration of a few tens of picoseconds, and a detection circuit with temporal resolution in the sub-nanosecond scale. The key point of these measurements is the need to increase the sensitivity to higher penetration depths of investigation, in particular for functional brain imaging, where skin, skull, and cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) heavily mask the brain signal. To date, the widespread adoption of the non-invasive optical monitoring techniques is mainly hampered by the traditional bulky, expensive, complex and fragile components which significantly impact the overall cost and dimension of the system. Our goal is the development of a miniaturized compact NIRS probe, that can be directly put in contact with the sample under test to obtain high diffused photon harvesting efficiency without the need for cumbersome optical fibers and lenses for light injection and collection. The proposed system is composed of two parts namely; i) pulsed light emission unit and ii) gated single-photon detection module. The light emission unit will employ a laser source pulsed at over 80MHz with picosecond pulse width generator embedded into the probe along with the light detection unit which comprises single-photon detectors integrated with other peripheral control circuitry. Short distance source and detector pairing, most preferably on a single chip has the potential to greatly expedites the traditional method of portable brain imaging

    Best practices for fNIRS publications

    Get PDF
    The application of functional near-infrared spectroscopy (fNIRS) in the neurosciences has been expanding over the last 40 years. Today, it is addressing a wide range of applications within different populations and utilizes a great variety of experimental paradigms. With the rapid growth and the diversification of research methods, some inconsistencies are appearing in the way in which methods are presented, which can make the interpretation and replication of studies unnecessarily challenging. The Society for Functional Near-Infrared Spectroscopy has thus been motivated to organize a representative (but not exhaustive) group of leaders in the field to build a consensus on the best practices for describing the methods utilized in fNIRS studies. Our paper has been designed to provide guidelines to help enhance the reliability, repeatability, and traceability of reported fNIRS studies and encourage best practices throughout the community. A checklist is provided to guide authors in the preparation of their manuscripts and to assist reviewers when evaluating fNIRS papers

    Smart Optode for 8-Wavelength Time-Gated Diffuse Optics

    Get PDF
    We present the most compact (4 cm3) time domain diffuse optical spectroscopy system, hosting 8 laser sources emitting at different wavelengths, a large area time-gated detector, and a time-to-digital converter. We tested the optode using standardized protocols, enlightening a high light harvesting capability and large penetration depth in detecting realistic optical inhomogeneities. We tested it also in vivo for the non-invasive assessment of blood parameters in a vascular occlusion test and for the detection of brain activation, demonstrating the optode capability to follow task-related hemodynamic changes even through a single measurement, with no need for averaging or filtering as instead needed with most available systems. The optode is thus a good candidate for next generation home-monitoring devices, thanks to its good performances, small dimension and potential low-cost
    • …
    corecore