Validation of diffuse correlation spectroscopy against 15O-water PET for regional cerebral blood flow measurement in neonatal piglets

Research output: Contribution to journalJournal articleResearchpeer-review

  • Martina Giovannella
  • Bjørn Andresen
  • Julie B. Andersen
  • Sahla El-Mahdaoui
  • Davide Contini
  • Lorenzo Spinelli
  • Alessandro Torricelli
  • Greisen, Gorm
  • Turgut Durduran
  • Udo M. Weigel
  • Law, Ian

Diffuse correlation spectroscopy (DCS) can non-invasively and continuously asses regional cerebral blood flow (rCBF) at the cot-side by measuring a blood flow index (BFI) in non-traditional units of cm2/s. We have validated DCS against positron emission tomography using 15O-labeled water (15O-water PET) in a piglet model allowing us to derive a conversion formula for BFI to rCBF in conventional units (ml/100g/min). Neonatal piglets were continuously monitored by the BabyLux device integrating DCS and time resolved near infrared spectroscopy (TRS) while acquiring 15O-water PET scans at baseline, after injection of acetazolamide and during induced hypoxic episodes. BFI by DCS was highly correlated with rCBF (R = 0.94, p ' 0.001) by PET. A scaling factor of 0.89 (limits of agreement for individual measurement: 0.56, 1.39)×109× (ml/100g/min)/(cm2/s) was used to derive baseline rCBF from baseline BFI measurements of another group of piglets and of healthy newborn infants showing an agreement with expected values. These results pave the way towards non-invasive, cot-side absolute CBF measurements by DCS on neonates.

Original languageEnglish
JournalJournal of Cerebral Blood Flow and Metabolism
Volume40
Issue number10
Pages (from-to)2055-2065
Number of pages11
ISSN0271-678X
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 2020

    Research areas

  • Cerebral blood flow, continuous neuro-monitoring, diffuse correlation spectroscopy, near-infrared spectroscopy, PET

ID: 258774359