To date, brain imaging has largely relied on X-ray computed tomography and
magnetic resonance angiography with limited spatial resolution and long
scanning times. Fluorescence-based brain imaging in the visible and traditional
near-infrared regions (400-900 nm) is an alternative but currently requires
craniotomy, cranial windows and skull thinning techniques, and the penetration
depth is limited to 1-2 mm due to light scattering. Here, we report
through-scalp and through-skull fluorescence imaging of mouse cerebral
vasculature without craniotomy utilizing the intrinsic photoluminescence of
single-walled carbon nanotubes in the 1.3-1.4 micrometre near-infrared window.
Reduced photon scattering in this spectral region allows fluorescence imaging
reaching a depth of >2 mm in mouse brain with sub-10 micrometre resolution. An
imaging rate of ~5.3 frames/s allows for dynamic recording of blood perfusion
in the cerebral vessels with sufficient temporal resolution, providing
real-time assessment of blood flow anomaly in a mouse middle cerebral artery
occlusion stroke model.Comment: 38 pages, 4 main figures and 11 Supplementary figures. published in
Nature Photonics, 201