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Diffuse reflectance spectroscopy characterization for extraction of tissue physiological parameters

Posted on:2011-08-14Degree:Ph.DType:Thesis
University:Duke UniversityCandidate:Phelps, Janelle EliseFull Text:PDF
GTID:2464390011971314Subject:Engineering
Abstract/Summary:
Variations in hemoglobin concentration can be indicative of a number of serious complications, including blood loss and anemia. Rapid, noninvasive measurements of hemoglobin are important in applications where blood status is reflective of patient well-being, such as in the emergency room, operating room, or the battlefield. Probe-based diffuse reflectance spectroscopy is capable of noninvasively quantifying tissue optical properties, including hemoglobin concentration. The quantification of hemoglobin concentration using optical methods is complicated by tissue scattering and the robustness of the algorithm and instrumentation used to interrogate the tissue. The sensing depth of diffuse reflectance spectroscopy can be tailored by the wavelengths of light and probe design used.;In this thesis, the accuracy and clinical viability of different diffuse reflectance spectroscopy implementations are presented. The robustness of an inverse Monte Carlo model, in which tissue optical properties are determined from measured reflectance using ultraviolet-visible (UV-VIS) wavelengths and a steady-state instrument, was tested using laboratory measurements. From the laboratory measurements, a set of references was identified which provided accurate absorption and scattering measurements, independent of the optical properties of the target. In addition, the ability to quantify hemoglobin concentration and saturation over large ranges and concentrations of multiple absorbers was established.;Following the laboratory measurements, a clinical study in which UV-VIS spectra were measured from the sublingual mucosa of patients undergoing surgeries was carried out. From this study, the correlations of extracted hemoglobin to expected blood hemoglobin were found to be improved when a simple ratiometric method based on isosbestic wavelengths of hemoglobin was used. During this study, the probe positioning in the mouth was found to be unwieldy, and so the transition to a more secure probe that could be taped to the hand was made.;In order to penetrate the overlying skin, near-infrared (NIR) wavelengths with a different probe geometry was explored. Further investigation of the inverse Monte Carlo model with NIR wavelengths was executed, and while in theory this combination should yield accurate optical property estimation, laboratory measurements indicated large errors, presumably due to the instrument or low magnitude and reduced spectral features of hemoglobin absorption in the NIR. Instead, the use of a well-established frequency-domain instrument coupled with diffusion approximation was implemented to measure spectra from the thenar eminence of volunteers undergoing induced hypovolemia and subsequent retransfusion. There were some moderate correlations with blood hemoglobin, but because both this method and the Monte Carlo method with mucosal probe placement showed higher variability with probe pressure than the isosbestic ratiometric method, further development of the ratiometric method was made.;The ratiometric method was developed using simulations and validated with phantoms and clinical data. Monte Carlo modeled reflectance was generated for a large range of biologically-relevant absorption and scattering values. The modeled reflectance was scaled by a calibration spectra obtained from a single laboratory phantom measurement so that linear regression equations relating hemoglobin concentration to ratios could be applied directly to clinical or laboratory measurements. Ratios which could best estimate hemoglobin concentration independent of saturation and scattering were determined through the simulation and laboratory measurements. Three isosbestic ratios---545/390, 452/390, and 529/390 nm---were determined to best estimate hemoglobin concentration, and ratiometric-extracted hemoglobin was shown to correlate well to Monte Carlo-extracted hemoglobin in clinical measurements. Because only a single calibration measurement (which can be measured on a different day) is required per instrument and probe combination, this method can be implemented in near real-time and is thus appropriate for applications where hemoglobin concentration must be measured rapidly.
Keywords/Search Tags:Hemoglobin concentration, Diffuse reflectance spectroscopy, Tissue, Method, Laboratory measurements, Monte carlo, Measured, Blood
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