Towards microvascular pressure estimation using ultrasound and photoacoustic imaging

Microvascular pressure drives perfusion in tissues but is difficult to measure. A method is proposed here to estimate relative pressures in microvessels using photoacoustic and ultrasound tracking of small vessels during calibrated tissue compression. A photoacoustic–ultrasound dual imaging transduc...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Min Choi, Roger Zemp
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Elsevier 2019-06-01
Series:Photoacoustics
Online Access:http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S2213597918300533
Description
Summary:Microvascular pressure drives perfusion in tissues but is difficult to measure. A method is proposed here to estimate relative pressures in microvessels using photoacoustic and ultrasound tracking of small vessels during calibrated tissue compression. A photoacoustic–ultrasound dual imaging transducer is used to directly compress on tissue in vivo. Photoacoustic signals from blood vessels diminish as an external load is applied and eventually reaches a minimum or vanishes when external pressure is sufficiently greater than the internal pressure. Two methods were proposed to estimate relative pressures. In the first approach, vessels were tracked during compression and when the vessel photoacoustic signals vanished below a set threshold, the internal pressures were assigned as the external loading pressure at the respective collapse point. In this approach pressures required to collapse vessel signatures completely were found to be much greater than physiological blood pressures. An alternative approach was to track the cross-sectional area of small vessels with changing external load and fitting the data to a known Shapiro model for thin-walled vessel compression. This approach produced estimates of internal pressures which were much more realistic. Both approaches produced the same rank-ordering of relative pressures of various vessels in vivo. Approaches thus far require future work to become fully quantitative but the present contributions represent steps towards this goal. Keywords: Photoacoustic imaging, Ultrasound imaging, Perfusion, Hemodynamics
ISSN:2213-5979