Measurement of Blood Velocity With Laser Scanning Microscopy: Modeling and Comparison of Line-Scan Image-Processing Algorithms

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Abstract

Laser scanning microscopy is widely used to measure blood hemodynamics with line-scans in physiological and pathological vessels. With scans of broken lines, i.e., lines made of several segments with different orientations, it also allows simultaneous monitoring of vessel diameter dynamics or the activity of specific cells. Analysis of red blood cell (RBC) velocity from line-scans requires specific image-processing algorithms, as angle measurements, Line-Scanning Particle Image Velocimetry (LSPIV) or Fourier transformation of line-scan images. The conditions under which these image-processing algorithms give accurate measurements have not been fully characterized although the accuracy of measurements vary according to specific experimental parameters: the vessel type, the RBC velocity, the scanning parameters, and the image signal to noise ratio. Here, we developed mathematical models for the three previously mentioned line-scan image-processing algorithms. Our models predict the experimental conditions in which RBC velocity measurements are accurate. We illustrate the case of different vessel types and give the parameter space available for each of them. Last, we developed a software generating artificial line-scan images and used it to validate our models.

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Chaigneau, E., & Charpak, S. (2022). Measurement of Blood Velocity With Laser Scanning Microscopy: Modeling and Comparison of Line-Scan Image-Processing Algorithms. Frontiers in Physiology, 13. https://doi.org/10.3389/fphys.2022.848002

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